1. Electronic Structure of p-conjugated polymer chains ; 2. Doping of Conducting Polymers ; 3. Novel Properties Generate New Opportunities ; 4. Disorder Induced Metal-Insulator (M-I) Transition in Conducting Polymers ; 5. Metallic State of Conducting Polymers ; 6. Nonlinear Excitations in Conjugated Polymers: Solitons, Polarons and Bipolarons ; 7. Solitons, polarons and bipolarons: Experimental results ; 8. Conjugated Polymers as Semiconductors ; 9. Polymer Based Light Emitting Diodes (PLEDs) and Displays Fabricated from Arrays of PLEDs ; 10. Light Emitting Electrochemical Cells (LEC) ; 11. Semiconducting Polymers as Laser Materials ; 12. Photoinduced Electron Transfer from Semiconducting Polymers to Acceptors ; 13. Photodiodes and Photovoltaic Solar Cells ; 14. Polymer Field Effect Transistors (FETs)
Alan J. Heeger won the 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry for the discovery and development of conductive polymers. He began his research career at the Universoty of Pennsylvania, and has been a Professor at the University of California, Santa Barbara, since 1982. Since 1988 he has also been Adjunct Professor of Physics, The University of Utah, and has been Chief Scientist, UNIAX Corporation since 1999. In 2005 he became the Director of the Heeger Center for Advanced Materials, Gwangju Institute of Science and Technology, Korea. He has won numerous awards and honours for his work. Niyazi Serdar Sariciftci worked with Alan Heeger at the Institute for Polymers & Organic Solids, University of California between 1992 and 1996. He has since been a Professor, then Chair, at the Institute for Physical Chemistry at the Johannes Kepler University in Linz, Austria, and is founding director of Linz Institute for Organic Solar Cells (LIOS). In 2005 he was elected a Fellow of the the Royal Society of Chemistry (UK). Dr. Ebinazar Namdas has a Ph.D. in Physics and is a Lecturer at the Centre for Organic Photonics & Electronics at the University of Queensland (UQ), Australia. He has more than 10 years of research experience in the opto-electronic properties of organic semiconductors. Prior to joining UQ, Dr. Namdas was a Senior Researcher at the University of California, Santa Barbara, USA.
Semiconducting and Metallic Polymers is an elegant introduction to
the electronic properties of conducting (and semiconducting)
polymers. The first half of the book provides a comprehensive, but
straightforward, introduction to the optical and conduction
properties of most commonly used polymers. The authors always
discuss things with an eye to potential and current applications
and the second half of the book is dedicated to the use of polymers
in semiconducting device applications. This covers the now
technologically very important areas of LEDs (Light Emitting
Diodes), photodetectors and photovoltaic cells and field effect
transistors.
*Robin Nicholas, Oxford University*
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