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Organic and Perovskite Electronics
Organic and organometal-halide perovskite materials have emerged in recent years as important alternatives to traditional inorganic materials for optoelectronic devices. These novel materials provide huge potential benefits such as reduced-cost processing, compatibility with nonconforming and flexible substrates, and tunable color properties, allowing for a range of interesting applications. Organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs) have become widespread commercially in displays, with improvements in brightness and contrast ratios, as well as interesting form factors such as thin and flexible devices. Perovskite-based photovoltaic devices are attracting considerable interest as a potentially disruptive energy technology, with power conversion efficiencies similar or in excess of those seen in current panels but with simpler processing requirements.
Like any interesting and fast-growing field of technology, the achievements, and benefits in the field of organic/organometallic electronics and optoelectronics don’t come without their own challenges. The inherent properties of these materials make them challenging to deposit using a vapor-phase technology:
- The materials are typically prone to decomposition at relatively lower temperatures which has led to development and use of evaporation sources with complex set of features and temperature control mechanisms.
- Additionally, some of the active films in the device architecture require precise rate control algorithms to achieve the required host-dopant compositions, which in turn also require critical hardware considerations.
- Materials are mostly sensitive to moisture and oxygen, so the protection from these elements during and post-fabrication is critical.
- Organic and Perovskite Light-Emitting Diodes (OLEDs & PLEDs)
- Organic and Perovskite Photovoltaics (OPV & Perovskite PV)
- Hybrid Inorganic/Perovskite Tandem Photovoltaics
- Organic Thin-Film Transistors (OTFTs & OFETs)
- Organic Memory Devices and Spintronics
- Organic Sensors
- Flexible and Wearable Electronics
- Building-Integrated Photovoltaics (BIPV)