Download - Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
1/13
2009 The Center or Organic Photonics and Electronics :: Georgia Institute o Technology
www.cope.gatech.edu
(continued on page 2)
On November 17, COPE hosted its
inaugural Open House at the KlausAdvanced Computing Building at Georgia
Tech. This provided COPE with a orum to
showcase the Center and give the Georgia Tech
community and industrial representatives
greater insight into the research activities o
the Center through research presentations,
laboratory tours, a poster session, and several
networking opportunities.
Open House Brings Together Industry
and Academiaby Veronique Bredas, Seth Marder, and Jason Martin
NEWSLETTER Issue: 00January 15, 2010
Participants at the inaugural COPE Open House attend one o several presentations that highlighted the
research eorts o aculty members.
In the News
COPE Announces New Directorsh
(December 31, 2009)
Today, the Center or Organic Photonics a
Electronics (COPE) announced a leadersh
transition, whereby Professor Berna
Kippelen of the College of Electrical a
Computer Engineering, will be assumi
the position of Director of COPE ne
year.
The change in leadership involve
shift of certain administrative functio
between not only departments, b
colleges. Current director, Profess
Seth Marder, will serve with Profess
Kippelen as co-Director for the ne
year with Professor Kippelen assumi
full responsibilities of the Directorsh
January 1, 2011.
Air Force Center o Excellence Awarded
Georgia Tech (December 1, 2009)
The Georgia Institute o Technology h
been awarded a U.S. Air Force Center
Excellence to design nanostructures
energy harvesting and adaptive materia
and to develop tools to optimize critic
cognitive processes o the mode
warghter.
The $10.5 million Center, known as
Bio-nano-enabled Inorganic/Organ
Nanostructures and Improved Cogniti
(BIONIC) Center, is being led by Vladim
Tsukruk and Kenneth Sandhage, proesso
in Georgia Techs School o Materi
Science and Engineering. (See page 6
more details)
For more stories visitwww.cope.gatech.edu/news
T
he day started with an overview
presentation o COPE by Dr. SethMarder, Director o COPE, ollowed by three
20-minute presentations by Dr. Bernard
Kippelen (An overview o the research on
printed electronics at COPE), Dr. Samuel
Graham (Encapsulation and reliability o
organic electronics), and Dr. Joseph Perry
(Advances in organic photonic materials and
nanocomposites or energy storage).
Center for Organic Photonics & Electronics
The event brought together 17
industrial representatives rom
15 companies, and about 20 aculty
members rom diverse departments
(including chemistry, mechanical
engineering, physics, and material
science and enginerring), as well as
50 students, post docs, and research
scientists.
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
2/13
2
Faculty SpotlightDr. Ken H. Sandhage is the B. Mifin Hood Proessor in the School
o Materials Science and Engineering, and an Adjunct Proessor in
the School o Chemistry and Biochemistry at Georgia Tech. Prior
to arriving at Georgia Tech in the all o 2003, Dr. Sandhage had
been a aculty member in the Materials Science and Engineering
Department at Ohio State University since 1991. Prior to joining
academia, Dr. Sandhage worked as a Senior Scientist at AmericanSuperconductor Corporation (where he conducted research on
the abrication o high-Tc
superconducting oxide wires) and
at Corning Glass Works (where he conducted research on the
processing o optical bers or applications at high bandwidth
and in radiative environments).
Dr. Sandhages research interests have been ocused at the
interaces between various branches o materials science
and engineering (metallurgy, ceramics, polymers) and other
disciplines (particularly chemistry and biology). Current
interdisciplinary research conducted by the Sandhage group
includes:
i) the development o wet chemical layer-by-layer
deposition methods to generate thin conormal coatings
o inorganic and inorganic/organic composite materials on
biological or synthetic templates o complex 3-D shape,
ii) the use o biomolecules (e.g., peptides, proteins)
induce the ormation o non-natural inorganic and organ
inorganic composite materials under ambient or ne
ambient conditions, and
iii) the chemical conversion o inorganic structures, v
displacement reactions with gas or liquid reactants, in
new inorganic materials that retain the morphology a
ne eatures o the starting inorganic structures (materi
alchemy).
Such processes are being examined or the abrication
chemically- and structurally-tailored materials or photovolt
cells, minimally-invasive sensors, catalysts, batteries, photon
phononic devices, implants, and ultra-high-temperature rock
nozzles. Underlying such applied research is the developme
o undamental understanding o the mechanisms controlli
the kinetics o such reaction processes and the associated mic
nanostructural evolution.
Dr. Sandhage currently directs research within the BEA(Biologically Enabled Advanced Materials) Center, and co dire
(with Pro. Vladimir Tsukruk) research within the BIONIC (B
nano-enabled Inorganic/Organic Nanostructures and Improv
Cognition) Air Force Center o Excellence. Interdisciplina
research within these Centers has been enabled by eecti
collaborations with a number o other research groups at Georg
Tech (particularly with COPE members), at other universit
(University o Caliornia at San Diego, Harvard Universi
University o Illinois, University o Pennsylvania), and at the A
Force Research Laboratory.
Ken H. Sandhage
B. Mifin Hood Proessor
Ofce: Molecular Science & Engineering, 3100
Phone: 404-894-6882
Email: [email protected]
The morning sessions wrapped up with laboratory tours o somekey research acilities. Industrial representatives toured theMolecular Science and Engineering Building where they visited the
laser spectroscopy lab, the organic electronics lab, or the chemical
synthesis lab. This was ollowed by a walk-through o the new Marcus
Nanotechnology building. Feedback provided by the participants
suggested that the lab tours were a very valuable aspect o the day.
In between the morning and aternoon sessions, discussionsamong aculty, students, and industrial representatives during theNetworking Lunch gave participants a orum to help nucleate new
partnerships and potentially develop new programs between aculty
and industry.
During the aternoon session, presentations by 15 COPE acumembers addressed their specic areas o expertise. Twas ollowed by the Poster Session & Industrial Exhibition. Som
22 graduate students and research scientists presented posters
their research while participants engaged in discussions with acu
members and industrial representatives.
COPE intends to continue building on the industry connectiothat the Open House generated by launching an IndustrAliates Program (IAP) that will increase the Centers network
industry partners. More inormation on the IAP can be ound on t
COPE website www.cope.gatech.edu/IAP.
(continued from page 1)
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
3/13
Partnerships or Research
and Education in Materialsby Tatiana Timoeeva
In September 2009, three universities New Mexico HighlandUniversity (NMHU), the Georgia Institute o Technology (GaTecand Morehouse College (MC) - were recipients o an award bNSF/DMR to conduct a collaborative project within the ramewo
o the PREM program. PREM - Partnerships or Research anEducation in Materials - was established by NSF to increase thparticipation by underrepresented groups in materials scienceand enhance diversity in materials research and education. Thgoal is set to be achieved by a long-term, multi-investigatcollaboration between minority-serving institutions and largresearch NSF/DMR centers such as MRSECs or CTSs. The main o this project is Tatiana Timoeeva (NMHU) and Co-PIs are SetMarder (GaTech) and Brian Lawrence (MC).
NMHU and the Science and Technology Center, Materials anDevices or Inormation Technology Research (STC MDITcollaborated in studies o organic photonic materials or abo
seven years. Recently, MC joined this collaboration, generating aidea to present a project rom the three universities to suppotheir collaborative research and educational activities.
The collaborators are exploring three areas o organic photonmaterials: two-photon absorbing materials, applicable biological imaging and photodynamic therapy; crystallinnonlinear-optical materials, including materials aimed or THgeneration and electro optical applications; and the developmeo new organic polymer materials or solar-cell applications. Thesubprojects were collected under title Light Matter Interaction
Theory and Applications (LMITA). This project is also ocused oattracting and increasing the number o students in the area ophotonic materials.
NMHU was established in 1893; it is located in Las Vegas, NeMexico and it admits more that 65% Hispanic students. MC is historically black college in Atlanta that was established in 186and which admits about 95% Arican American students. Boschools are relatively small with about 3000 students. It maketheir collaboration with MDITR and Georgia Tech particularvaluable or creating a network between proessors and studenthrough which students can nd help and guidance or pursuinscientic careers.
Imperial College London has established a new Plastic ElectronicsCentre to integrate and coordinate the plastic electronics researchactivity within Imperial, bringing together an interdisciplinaryteam rom across the college. Proessor Donal Bradley FRS is theCentres director, and the team comprises o researchers romthe departments o Physics, Chemistry and Materials, and alsorom the Institute or Biomedical Engineering and Division oNeuroscience.
The Centres mission is to actively stimulate new cutting-edgehigh impact research and to meet Imperials strategic intent toharness the strengths and breadth o our research to address theglobal challenges o climate change, energy and global health andsecurity. The Centre comprises the ollowing research themes:Materials design; Synthesis and processing; Advanced multi-parameter structural, electrical, and optical characterization;Nanostructure and interace control; Multi-scale materials anddevice modelling; and Device abrication and optimization.
In addition to the new Centre, research in plastic electronicsat Imperial has been urther bolstered by a recent 6 millionaward rom EPSRC or a Doctoral Training Centre (DTC) in plasticelectronics. The DTC aims to support postgraduate students and
develop the next generation o world-class researchers in thiseld.
Imperial has had a long standing partnership with COPE throughthe AtlantIC Alliance programme. More recently, this has beenextended through the Solvay Global Alliance programme whichis enabling Imperials Proessor James Durrant and Dr ThomasAnthopoulos to work with COPE on photophysical studies omolecular based photovoltaics and organic transistors.
Anita Lopez explains her poster to biology proessor Dr. Jennier Hernandduring Research Day at New Mexico Highlands University
Centre or PlasticElectronics atImperialCollege
London
Dr. Brian OReagan, Ms. Xiaoe Li, and Proessor James Durrant discuss theperormance o dye-sensitised nanocrystalline solar cells.
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
4/13
Tell us more about your research.Prior to coming to Georgia Tech, I was involved in various types o research includinganalytical/environmental chemistry at FIU and the study o liquid-crystal systemsat Dow Corning in Midland, MI. When I arrived at Georgia Tech in 2006 I wantedto change directions and ocus on organic chemistry research. I was ortunate to
have the opportunity to join the group o Pro. Marder in 2007. My research isocused on the design and synthesis o novel organic molecules that are utilized ashole-transport layers or as host layers or transition-metal emitters within solution-processed phosphorescent organic light-emitting diodes (PHOLEDs). PHOLEDs arehighly sought ater as an alternative or ecient lighting and display technologies.I also work on the study o crosslinkers or the insolubilization o solution-processedOLED layers that can simpliy and reduce the abrication costs o such technologies.This work has resulted in two patents and we are currently in the process o writingseveral papers.
My research is unded by Solvay and is possible with the help o some o ourcollaborators at COPE, such as Pro. Kippelen and his group who provide theirexpertise or the design and abrication o OLED devices. I am especially thankulto my advisor and my group or their invaluable support, help, and riendship.
What are your uture career plans?My immediate plans ater graduation are the pursuit o a post doctoral appointment.
Beyond that I eel that I will likely pursue a career in academia.
When you are not in the lab, what are some o your interests?Among other things, I enjoy watching movies and baseball, traveling to newplaces, and volunteeringIve had some wonderul opportunities to be involved inrecruitment and outreach activities through COPE and CMDITR.
Recently, I am busy with a new organization that other Hispanic students at GeorgiaTech and I ounded, called the Latino Organization o Graduate Students (LOGRAS).I currently serve as the rst treasurer o the organization and enjoy working with theother members o the executive board and the membership to establish the vision
and direction o the group.
Carlos Zuniga, PhD candidate, Marder Group
Where did you complete your undergraduate degree?I received my B.S. in Chemistry rom the Department o Chemistry & Biochemistry
at Florida International University in Miami, FL.
Why did you decide on Georgia Tech? When do you expect to graduate?The decision to come to Georgia Tech was easy or various reasons, among which
were the caliber o the research and aculty at the institution. I hope to nish mydegree by the end o 2010.
Student Proile
4
Saety in the Laboratoryby William Underwood
Justus von Liebig once gave the ollowing advice his student, August Kekule, I you want to becomchemist, you will have to ruin your health.
Just as chemical knowledge has improved since t19th century, so has the attitude towards risk. Improvmethodology allows potentially dangerous reactioto be perormed saely while easy access to MS
databases makes hazard inormation readily availabNevertheless, amiliarity breeds complacency athe daily use o chemicals oten causes researchersunderestimate the dangers involved with their dawork, resulting in unsae practices.
In order to improve laboratory saety, sae practicmust become habitual and appropriate equipmemust be available. To assist in the latter, fame-retardalab coats are now being rented. These lab coats provbetter protection against pyrophoric chemicals aservice includes weekly cleaning o the lab coats.
Currently, there are several initiatives underway thpromote sae habits:
Regular lab inspections help make researchaware o easily overlooked practices.Good laboratory habits, such as closing the uhood, proper labeling, and maintaining a clelab area, are being enorced.Preparation o a detailed risk assessmentrequired beore conducting an experimeor the rst time. Such assessments make tresearcher stop and consider what dangers cooccur during an experiment, and how they mbe dealt with, beore the reaction is underw
Researchers develop the habit o predictpotential accidents beore they happen, aormulating appropriate responses.
These initiatives are, at their core, designed to airesearchers common sense. Such simple changes seto greatly increase laboratory saety without requira large expenditure o time. Chemical researchers longer need to ruin their health to be productive.
Questions? William UnderwoodSaety Ocer, Marder [email protected]
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
5/13
5
Ph.D. in Materials Science and Engineering at Norolk State University:
A Student-Centered Program by Suely BlackApplications include biomedical treatment, environmentsensing, and highly sensitive magnetic sensors.
Enhancing experiences beyond the traditional course anresearch training provide students with opportunities to broadetheir knowledge and to exercise those qualities and skinecessary or a successul proessional lie ater graduation. Th
CMR Colloquium, a weekly series o lectures delivered by invitespeakers, NSU aculty and students, provides a orum or learninand discussing new developments in research areas o intereMini lecture series and workshops oered by external collaboratoenrich the regular course oerings. Students interested academic careers have the opportunity to co-teach courseand lead study sessions or undergraduate students. Speciellowships and student clubs support outreach, educationand inrastructure development initiatives, giving studenopportunities to exercise leadership skills. Summer internshipat partner universities and with industry are encouraged, anstudents have taken advantage o them, including internationexperiences. Invariably students travel to one or two nationscientic and proessional conerences annually, presenting theresearch and networking. Graduate students meet as a grouwith the program coordinator weekly, an activity that acilitatinteraction among all students, announcement o upcominevents and available opportunities, and sharing o suggestionand concerns by students. This arrangement ensures that studenhave requests and concerns addressed in a timely ashion, anadvance towards graduation without unwarranted delay.
Student-centered and broadly interdisciplinary, the Ph.D.in Materials Science and Engineering (MSE) at Norolk StateUniversity (NSU) provides students the opportunity to tailortheir education and academic experiences to prepare or theirchosen careers. The program, established in the all o 2007 andcoordinated by the Center or Materials Research, is housed inMCAR, the McDemmond Center or Applied Research a six-story,
135,000 square-oot research building, which was inaugurated just a year beore the start o the program. In its two years oexistence, the program has doubled its enrollment, and currentlysupports eighteen students.
Focusing on the design and abrication o new materials anddevices to contribute to the development o technologies ohigh societal impact, twelve chemistry, physics, engineering andbiology aculty advise undergraduate and graduate students in
collaborative projects with internal and external partners. Thecohesiveness o the aculty and student bodies acilitates constantcross-disciplinary interactions, and leads to varied and numerousopportunities or research and proessional experiences. Externalpartnerships through unded projects allow students to takeadvantage o collaborators advice and acilities. Students areencouraged to pursue, and are supported in their eorts toseek, experiences that complement their experiences at NSU.Current partners include Georgia Tech, University o Washington,University o Arizona, Cornell University and Purdue University.Doctoral research projects with ocus varying rom computationalmodeling through device abrication are available. These aresome o the major research thrusts currently being pursued:
Metamaterials: engineering multi-phase composite, custom-
tailored materials, which have unparalleled responses toelectromagnetic waves, acoustic waves and heat fow.Applications include imaging with innitely high denitionand invisibility cloaking.Advanced unctional organic and polymeric materials: organicchromophores and polymers designed to sel assembleto exhibit ecient or novel electrical and optoelectronicresponses in a controlled manner. Applications include costeective solar cells, and aster and larger capacity signalprocessing in ber-optic communications.Multilayer nanostructures: semiconductor and inorganic/organic multiunctional materials designed to respondto two or more stimuli, e.g. chemicals and magnetic eld.
Norolk States partnership with Georgia Tech through the NSScience and Technology Center on Materials and Devices Inormation Technology has played and continues to play aimportant role in the MSE graduate program, through aculand student interactions. The Ph.D. in Materials Science anEngineering program will continue to evolve, adapting to thneeds o the ast-changing proessional landscape o the eld; aachievement made possible through the power o partnerships
Contact Inormation:Dr. Suely M. Black, Program [email protected] | 757 823-8403http://www.nsu.edu/cmr
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
6/13
6
Georgia Tech Awarded U.S. Air Force Center o
Excellence in Nanostructures and Improved Cognitionby Vladimir Tsukruk, Ken Sandhage and Abby Vogel
The Georgia Institute o Technology has been awarded a U.S. Air ForceCenter o Excellence to design nanostructures or energy harvestingand adaptive materials, and to develop tools to optimize criticalcognitive processes o the modern warghter. The $10.5 million/5
year program, known as the Bio-nano-enabled Inorganic/OrganicNanostructures and Improved Cognition (BIONIC) Center, is beingco-directed by Vladimir Tsukruk and Kenneth Sandhage, proessorsin Georgia Techs School o Materials Science and Engineering.
The BIONIC Center utilizes the expertise and capabilities ointegrated teams o Georgia Tech aculty and students (rom theColleges o Engineering and Science), Air Force researchers (rom theMaterials & Manuacturing Directorate and the Human EectivenessDirectorate o the Air Force Research Laboratory, AFRL), and an OhioState University (OSU) aculty collaborator.
Advanced materials is an area o importance or the Air Force, sincethe landscape o materials science is rapidly changing and bio-
nano-materials are classes o pervasive materials that exhibit uniquecapabilities and have the potential to address Air Force needs,explained Rajesh Naik, a scientist in the U.S. Air Force ResearchLaboratory (AFRL) Materials and Manuacturing Directorate. Inaddition, improved cognition tools are required or assessing thecognitive ability o the warghter as we ask or more rom ourhuman operators in the most demanding environments.
The BIONIC Center includes a group o core members rom Georgia Tech, The Ohio State University, and scientists and engineers atAFRL. Lockheed Martin Aeronautics Company is also an industrialcollaborator. The proposed research integrates several disciplineswithin the Colleges o Science (biochemistry; physical, organic, andinorganic chemistry; psychology) and Engineering (materials, optical,
electrical, biomedical engineering) at Georgia Tech. The proposedwork also involves the use o biomimetic schemes (e.g., tunablesuraces) and biomolecules (e.g., peptides, proteins, phospholipids)to develop unctional inorganic/organic nanocomposites orenergetic and adaptive materials and to modiy and assess cognitiveactivity. Such integration o biotechnology with nanotechnology isa major campus-wide theme at Georgia Tech.
Funding or the Center o Excellence is provided by the Materialsand Manuacturing Directorate and the Human EectivenessDirectorate o AFRL, the U.S. Air Force Oce o Scientic Research,and Georgia Tech.Georgia Tech was chosen to lead this Center o Excellence because
o its investment in inrastructure development, including newacilities and instrumentation; its recruitment o high-caliber acultymembers and students; and its emphasis in bio-nanotechnology andcognitive sciences, said Morley Stone, chie scientist o the HumanPerormance Wing o AFRLs Human Eectiveness Directorate.
There are three major research thrusts, called interdisciplinaryresearch groups, within the BIONIC Center. Each group containsseveral collaborators rom AFRLs Materials and ManuacturingDirectorate and/or Human Eectiveness Directorate.For the rst thrust, led by Sandhage, researchers are designing,abricating, characterizing, and modeling the perormance oinorganic/organic nanocomposites or ecient, remote energy-
harvesting devices, such as photovoltaics and batteries.
The U.S. Air Force utilizes autonomous drones that they would like operate or longer periods o time, explained co-director Sandhagwho holds the B. Miin Hood Proessorship in the School o MateriaScience and Engineering and an adjunct position in the School
Chemistry and Biochemistry. To do that, they need a robust, coseective energy source that perorms eciently or extended timewhile providing high pulses o power when needed.
Tsukruk, co-director o the center, is leading the secinterdisciplinary research group, which is ocused on designinabricating, characterizing and simulating the perormance inorganic/organic nanocomposites or tunable, adaptive material
When these adaptive materials composed o compliant matricand embedded inorganic nanoparticles are exposed to heat or ligor both, they will change their properties in ways that will be useor sensing or morphing materials, said Tsukruk, who also holdsjoint appointment in Georgia Techs School o Polymer, Textile an
Fiber Engineering and is a GT Director o the Microanalysis Center
The third thrust is being led by Michelle LaPlaca, an associaproessor in the Wallace H. Coulter Department o BiomedicEngineering at Georgia Tech and Emory University. LaPlaca and hteam plan to develop tools and assessment methods to optimicritical cognitive processes.
U.S. Air Force analysts must remain attentive to computers ancontrols or hours at a time, so we aim to nd a molecular signatuo cognition that is sensitive to changes in stress levels and correlathese molecules with unctional brain maps using magnetresonance imaging techniques, said LaPlaca. We want to learn aboa warghters physiological response to dierent situations and u
this inormation to optimize training and work eectiveness.
In addition to its research objectives, another goal or the Center Excellence is to conduct stimulating collaborative research that wmotivate students to consider working at AFRL. In order to develorequired technical expertise and to allow or eective knowledgtranser between Georgia Tech and AFRL, U.S. graduate studen(Air Force Scholars) will spend summer months at AFRL (DaytoOH) under the supervision o an AFRL researcher. Weeklong stays post-doctoral ellows and Georgia Tech aculty at AFRL will also bused to enhance research interactions and technology transer.
Other core members o the Center include Regents proessMostaa El-Sayed, proessor Seth Marder and assistant proessor N
Krger rom the Georgia Tech School o Chemistry and Biochemistproessor Bernard Kippelen rom the Georgia Tech School Electrical and Computer Engineering; Shella Keilholz, an assistaproessor in the Coulter Department o Biomedical EngineerinEric Schumacher, an assistant proessor in the Georgia Tech Schoo Psychology; and Hamish Fraser, a proessor in the Department Materials Science and Engineering at the Ohio State University.This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Air Forunder Award No. FA9550-09-1-0162. Any opinions, ndingconclusions or recommendations expressed in this publication athose o the principal investigators and do not necessarily refethe views o the U.S. Air Force.
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
7/13
7
lm barrier material utilizes a vacuum deposition process in wha thin layer o SiO
xor SiN
xis deposited by PECVD at temperatu
near 110 C. Due to the low deposition temperature, the PEClm is typically lled with many deects and does not presitsel as a good barrier lm. To create the high barrier matea second layer consisting o Al
2O
3is then deposited on top
the SiOx
or SiNx
using ALD, conormally coating the surace alling in small deects. This hybrid barrier layer has been shoto have WVTR rates on the order o 10-5 g/m2/day which is witthe range o required perormance or organic electronics. lms were then used to encapsulate Pentacene/C
60solar c
and demonstrated shel lietimes over 7000 hours without signicant degradation.
The hybrid lm represents an advancement in thin lm barprocessing since it only requires a ew deposition steps wcompared to multilayer laminate lms typically used by othOverall, excellent barrier perormance has been achieved wsimpliying the manuacturing processing procedure and tiAdditional success has also been obtained by developing seamethods which can be used with lamination to create additiolow cost routes to packaging devices. Current work continueinvestigate additional hybrid architectures and their use alowith the advanced sealing methods to encapsulate OPVs, OLE
OFETs, and, most recently, organic electrochromic windows.
A packaged organic electrochromic device made in collaboration with Pro.John Reynolds o the University o Florida.
Zeno-based OptoElectronics (ZOby Joseph Perry
The DARPA Zeno-based OptoElectronics (ZOE) prograperorming research on all-optical switching materials devices and seeks to enable the development o ultra-energy (
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
8/13
8
(Zeno-based OptoElectronics (ZOE), continued from page 7)
The rst 18 month phase o the project is underway. The objectivo the DARPA ZOE project are to: 1) develop a new generationmolecular and semiconductor materials with strong nonlineabsorptive properties that can be controlled with a uniqpump wavelength, 2) demonstrate all-optical switching usimolecular and/or semiconductor materials whereby excitati
at one wavelength leads to switching o refection/transmissiocharacteristics or a beam carrying inormation at anothwavelength, and 3) to integrate the materials into scalabsilicon and silicon nitride photonic devices or high-perormanswitching and/or wavelength conversion processes. I successin developing ultra-low energy optical switches, the ZOE prograwill pave the way or a new generation o optical-switching devicthat could have applications in telecommunications and opticcomputing. Many members o our team have previously worktogether in collaborative R&D and have successully employed approach based on a eedback loop involving design, synthescharacterization, and application or development o organphotonic materials and devices.
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
9/13
9
Mission: To become a nationally andinternationally recognized center o excellence orscience o interaces in photovoltaic devices basedon organic and inorganic nanostructured hybridmaterials. Our Center will inspire, recruit, and trainuture scientists and leaders in the basic interacescience o solar electric energy conversion.
University o Arizona
Neal R. Armstrong, DirectorJeanne E. Pemberton, Assoc. DirectorSurace Science/Theory
S. Scott Saavedra, Assoc. Director, OperationsDominic McGrathJe PyunOliver MontiRobert NorwoodNasser Peyghambarian
Georgia Institute o Technology
Seth R. Marder, Associate DirectorMaterials
Bernard Kippelen, Associate DirectorDevice
ScienceJean-Luc BrdasSamuel Graham
National Renewable Energy Laboratory
David Ginley, Assoc. Director & DOE LiaisonDana Olson
Joseph Berry
University o Washington
David Ginger
Christine Luscombe
Princeton University
Antoine Kahn
by Neal R. Armstrong
Faculty at the University o Arizona, Georgia Institute oTechnology (including several ounding members o COPE),the University o Washington, and Princeton University,teaming up with scientists at the National RenewableEnergy Laboratories (NREL) have recently been awarded a$15M grant rom the Department o Energy to orm one o46 national Energy Frontier Research Centers (EFRC).
The Center or Interace Science: Hybrid Solar ElectricMaterials will ocus on the basic science o solar-to-electricenergy conversion underpinning emerging GenerationIII photovoltaic platorms, which may be composedo small molecule or polymer active layers, or hybrids
o these materials with nanomaterials such as oxide orsemiconductor nanoparticles. It was selected or thismission, out o a pool o 260 applications, ater a rigorousapplication and reviewing process, and is one o 31 EFRCprograms led by universities, the others being led bynational laboratories, non-prot organizations and onecorporate research laboratory. Many o the EFRC programsled by universities including this one led by the Universityo Arizona, have been unded by ARRA (stimulus) unds,and will run or ve years with an option or competitiverenewal or an additional ve years.
This group o scientists will specically ocus on the criticalinteraces in these technologies which limit their energyconversion eciencies, including metal/organic, metaloxide/organic and charge collection and encapsulantinteraces which currently limit our ability to ecientlyharvest charge rom these devices, and keep them stablein robust, inexpensive, printable ormats.
This EFRC program has its genesis in research unded bythe National Science Foundation, especially rom theScience and Technology Center or Materials and Devices
or Inormation Technology Research, by the Departmento Deense (Navy and Air Force), by industrial aliates atGeorgia Tech associated with COPE, and a host o earliercenter-like activities involving members o the Universityo Arizona and Georgia Tech. It builds extensively onthe analytical tools, theoretical methods, and syntheticprotocols developed in the last teen years o researchby these scientists in the area o new materials ortelecommunications, display, and energy conversiontechnologies.
Contact
Neal R. Armstrong
Proessor o Chemistry/Optical Sciences
University o [email protected]
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
10/13
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
11/13
Coropceanu, Veaceslav; Barlow, Stephen; Hagan, David J.; Van Stryland, Er ic W.;Bredas, Jean-Luc;Anderson, Harry L.; Wasielewski, Michael R. and Marder, Seth R.JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A. 113, 10826-10832 (2009).
Molecular design or improved photovoltaic eciency: band gap and absorptioncoecient engineering. Mondal, Rajib; Ko, Sangwon; Norton, Joseph E.; Miyaki,Nobuyuki; Becerril, Hector A.; Verploegen, Eric; Toney, Michael F.; Bredas, Jean-Luc;McGehee, Michael D. and Bao, Zhenan. JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY.19, 7195-7197 (2009).
Charge transport in oligo phenylene and phenylene-thiophene nanobers.Kjelstrup-Hansen, Jakob; Norton, Joseph E.; da Silva Filho, Demetrio A.; Bredas,Jean-Luc and Rubahn, Horst-Gunter. ORGANIC ELECTRONICS. 10, 1228-1234(2009).
Themed issue: nonlinear optics. The evolving eld o nonlinear optics-a personalperspective. Marder, Seth R. JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY. 19,7392-7393(2009).
Third-harmonic generation and its applications in optical image processing.Fuentes-Hernandez, Canek; Ramos-Ortiz, Gabriel; Tseng, Shuo-Yen; Gaj, MichaelP. and Kippelen, Bernard. JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY. 19, 7394-7401(2009).
Porphyrin dimers: A theoretical understanding o the impact o electroniccoupling strength on the two-photon absorption properties. Ohira, ShinoandBredas, Jean-Luc. JOURNAL OF MATERIALS CHEMISTRY. 19, 7545-7550 (2009).
Metalloporphyrin polymer with temporally agile, broadband nonlinearabsorption or optical limiting in the near inrared. Hales, Joel M.; Cozzuol,Matteo; Screen, Thomas E. O.; Anderson, Harry L. and Perry, Joseph W. OPTICSEXPRESS. 17, 18478-18488 (2009).
Hindered rolling and riction anisotropy in supported carbon nanotubes. Lucas,Marcel; Zhang, Xiaohua; Palaci, Ismael; Klinke, Christian; Tosatti, Erio and Riedo,Elisa. NATURE MATERIALS. 8, 876-881 (2009).
Quantum Dynamics o the Excited-State Intramolecular Proton Transer in 2-(2`-Hydroxyphenyl)benzothiazole. Kim, Justin; Wu, Yinghua; Bredas, Jean-LucandBatista, Victor S. ISRAEL JOURNAL OF CHEMISTRY. 49, 187-197 (2009).
Nondestructive In Situ Identication o Crystal Orientation o Anisotropic ZnONanostructures. Singamaneni, Srikanth; Gupta, Maneesh; Yang, Rusen; Tomczak,Melanie M.; Naik, Rajesh R.; Wang, Zhong L. and Tsukruk, Vladimir V. ACS NANO.3, 2593-2600 (2009).
Biocatalysis: Unmasked by stretching. Kharlampieva, Eugenia and Tsukruk,Vladimir V. NATURE MATERIALS. 8, 704-705 (2009).
Synthesis and Properties o Amphiphilic Poly(1,4-Phenylene Ethynylene)s Bearing
Alkyl and Semifuoroalkyl Substituents. Woody, Kathy B.; Nambiar, Rakesh;Brizius, Glen L. and Collard, David M. MACROMOLECULES. 42, 8102-8111 (2009).
Electronic structure o sel-assembled (fuoro)methylthiol monolayers on theAu(111) surace: Impact o fuorination and coverage density. Li, Hong; Duan,Yiqun; Paramonov, Pavel; Coropceanu, Veaceslav and Bredas, Jean-Luc. JOURNALOF ELECTRON SPECTROSCOPY AND RELATED PHENOMENA. 174, 70-77 (2009).
Alkynylated Aceno[2,1,3]thiadiazoles. Appleton, Anthony Lucas; Miao,Shaobin;Brombosz, Scott M.; Berger, Nancy J.; Barlow, Stephen; Marder, Seth R.;Lawrence, Brian M.; Hardcastle, Kenneth I. and Bunz, Uwe H. F. ORGANIC LETTERS.11, 5222-5225 (2009).
Exciton-Dissociation and Charge-Recombination Processes in Pentacene/C-60Solar Cells: Theoretical Insight into the Impact o Interace Geometry. Yi,Yuanping; Coropceanu, Veaceslav and Bredas, Jean-Luc. JOURNAL OF THEAMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY. 131, 15777-15783 (2009).
Bimetallic Nanostructures as Active Raman Markers: Gold-Nanoparticle Assemblyon 1D and 2D Silver Nanostructure Suraces. Gunawidjaja, Ray; Kharlampieva,Eugenia; Choi, Ikjun and Tsukruk, Vladimir V. SMALL. 5, 2460-2466 (2009).
Electron Transer-Induced Blinking in Ag Nanodot Fluorescence. Patel, SandeepA.; Cozzuol, Matteo; Hales, Joel M.; Richards, Chris I.; Sartin, Matthew; Hsiang,Jung-Cheng; Vosch, Tom; Perry, Joseph W. and Dickson, Robert M. JOURNAL OFPHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C. 113, 20264-20270 (2009).
Surace orce spectroscopic point load measurements and viscoelastic modellingo the micromechanical properties o air fow sensitive hairs o a spider(Cupiennius salei). McConney, Michael E.; Schaber, Clemens F.; Julian, Michael D.;Eberhardt, William C.; Humphrey, Joseph A. C.; Bar th, Friedrich G. and Tsukruk,Vladimir V. JOURNAL OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY INTERFACE. 6, 681-694 (2009).
Conjugated polymer-ullerene blend with strong optical limiting in the near-inrared. Chi, San-Hui; Hales, Joel M.; Cozzuol, Matteo and Ochoa, Charles;
Fitzpatrick, Madison and Perry, Joseph W. OPTICS EXPRESS. 17, 22062-22072(2009).
Critical Interaces in Organic Solar Cells and Their Infuence on the Open-Circuit Voltage. Potscavage, Jr., William J. ; Sharma, Asha and Kippelen, Bernard.ACCOUNTS OF CHEMICAL RESEARCH. 42, 1758-1767 (2009).
Potential Energy Curves or Cation-pi Interactions: O-Axis Congurations AreAlso Attractive. Marshall, Michael S.; Steele, Ryan P.; Thanthiriwatte, Kanchana Sand Sherrill, C. David. JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY A.113, 13528-13532(2009).
Molecular Understanding o Organic Solar Cells: The Challenges. Bredas, Jean-LNorton, Joseph E.; Cornil, Jerome and Coropceanu, Veaceslav. ACCOUNTS OF
CHEMICAL RESEARCH. 42, 1691-1699 (2009).Linear and Nonlinear Spectroscopy o a Porphyrin-Squaraine-PorphyrinConjugated System. Webster, Scott; Odom, Susan A.; Padilha, Lazaro A.;Przhonska, Olga V.; Peceli, Davorin; Hu, Honghua; Nootz, Gero; Kachkovski, AlexD.; Matichak, Jonathan; Barlow, Stephen; Anderson, Harry L.; Marder, Seth R.;Hagan, David J. and Van Stryland, Eric W. JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B113, 14854-14867 (2009).
Conjugated polymer-ullerene blend with strong optical limiting in the near-inrared. Chi, San-Hui; Hales, Joel M.; Cozzuol, Matteo; Ochoa, Charles; FitzpatricMadison and Perry, Joseph W. OPTICS EXPRESS.17, 22062-22072 (2009).
Electronic structure o the pentacene-gold interace: A density-unctional theostudy. Li, Hong; Duan, Yiqun; Coropceanu, Veaceslav and Bredas, Jean-Luc.ORGANIC ELECTRONICS. 10, 1571-1578 (2009).
Protein-Mediated Layer-by-Layer Syntheses o Freestanding Microscale Titania
Structures with Biologically Assembled 3-D Morphologies. Fang, Yunnan;Wu, Qingzhong; Dickerson, Matthew B.; Cai, Ye; Shian, Samuel; Berr igan, JohnD.; Poulsen, Nicole; Kroeger, Nils and Sandhage, Kenneth H. CHEMISTRY OFMATERIALS. 21, 5704-5710 (2009).
Modication o the Surace Properties o Indium Tin Oxide withBenzylphosphonic Acids: A Joint Experimental and Theoretical Study. HotchkisPeter J.; Li, Hong; Paramonov, Pavel B.; Paniagua, Sergio A.; Jones, Simon C.;Armstrong, Neal R.; Bredas, Jean-Luc and Marder, Seth R. ADVANCED MATERIAL21, 4496+ (2009).
Direct writing and charac terization o poly(p-phenylene vinylene) nanostructuWang, Debin; Kim, Suenne; Underwood, II, William D.; Giordano, Anthony J.;Henderson, Cliord L.; Dai, Zhenting; King, William P.; Marder, Seth R. and RiedoElisa. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS. 95 (2009).
Low-voltage solution-processed n-channel organic eld-eect transistors withhigh-k HO
2
gate dielectrics grown by atomic layer deposition. Tiwari, ShreePrakash; Zhang, Xiao-Hong; Potscavage, Jr., William J. and Kippelen, Bernard.APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS. 95, (2009).
Multiplex coherent anti-Stokes Raman scattering (MCARS) or chemicallysensitive, label-ree fow cytometry. Camp, Jr., Charles H.; Yegnanarayanan, SivaEtekhar, Ali A.; Sridhar, Hamsa and Adibi, Ali. OPTICS EXPRESS. 17, 22879-22889(2009).
Negative tone molecular resists using cationic polymerization: Comparisono epoxide and oxetane unctional groups. Lawson, Richard A.; Noga, DavidE.; Younkin, Todd R.; Tolbert, Laren M. and Henderson, Cliord L. JOURNAL OFVACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY B. 27, 2998-3003 (2009).
Bond contribution model or the prediction o glass transition temperature inpolyphenol molecular glass resists. Lawson, Richard A.; Yeh, Wei-Ming; HendersCliord L. JOURNAL OF VACUUM SCIENCE & TECHNOLOGY B. 27, 3004-3009(2009).
Low-voltage pentacene organic eld-eect transistors with high-kappa HO2
gadielectrics and high stability under bias stress. Zhang, Xiao-Hong ; Tiwari, ShreePrakash; Kim, Sung-Jin and Kippelen, Bernard. APPLIED PHYSICS LETTERS. 95(2009).
Thermochemical Nanolithography o Multiunctional a Nanotemplates orAssembling Nano-objects. Wang, Debin; Kodali, Vamsi K.; Underwood, II, WilliamD.; Jarvholm, Jonas E.; Okada, Takashi; Jones, Simon C.; Rumi, Mariacristina; DaiZhenting; King, William P.; Marder, Seth R.; Curtis, Jennier E. and Riedo, Elisa.ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS. 19, 3696-3702 (2009).
Assessment o stress contributions in GaN high electron mobility transistors odiering substrates using Raman spectroscopy. Beechem, Thomas; ChristenseAdam; Green, D. S. and Graham, Samuel. JOURNAL OF APPLIED PHYSICS. 106(2009).
11
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
12/13
-
8/14/2019 Newsletter Volume 003 (January 15, 2010)
13/13
Center for Organic Photonics & Electron
Georgia Institute of Technolo
Molecular Science & Engineering Build
901 Atlantic Dr
Happy New Year to you.
2010 promises to be an
exciting new year for the
Georgia Tech Center for
Organic Photonics and
Electronic s, COPE. Of
primary importance, Iwould like to announce
a leadership transition
in which my colleague,
For more inormation visit us at:
www.cope.gatech.edu
Professor Bernard Kippelen, will be assuming the
position as the Director of COPE later this year.
As the change in leadership involves a shift of
certain administrative functions between not only
departments, but colleges, I will serve with Bernard as
co-Director for the next several months, to ensure that
the process moves forward smoothly.
As many of you know, COPE was founded in 2003 andI had the honor to serve as its founding Director. In
the past six or so years, COPE has accomplished many
things, but I am most proud of it staying true to its core
values of supporting excellence in research, embracing
and promoting diversity, creating an educational and
research environment that encourages interdisciplina ry
and collaborative interactions, and ensuring that
breakthroughs mean more than well cited papers.
COPE now has over 20 faculty members from 8 school s,
and I have been very privileged and grateful to serve
them and Georgia Tech in my capacity as founding
Director.
Georgia Techs selection of Bernard Kippelen as the
next Director of COPE, is a recognition of not only his
many scientific contributions to the area of organic
electronics and photonics, but also his commitment
to the core values I alluded to above. Bernard brings
to COPE a tremendous amount of vision, energy and
experience and I very much look forward to working
closely with him and the greater COPE community in
the years to come.
Sincerely,
Seth R. Marder
Director of COPE
Upcoming
Events & Activities
COPE Seminar SeriesDr. David Bucknall o the Scho
o Polymer, Textile, and Fib
Engineering (PTFE) at Georgia Te
COPE Seminar SeriesDr. Michael Bendikov o the
Weizmann Institute o Science
COPE Seminar SeriesDr. Jeanne Pemberton o the
University o Arizona
4th Solvay-COPE Symposiumon Organic ElectronicsThis by invitation only event
showcases the work being done b
COPE aculty, students, staf, and
global partners.
February 23, 2010MoSE Building
G011
April 14, 2010MoSE Building
G011
April 21, 2010MoSE Building
G011
May 6-7, 2010IMEC
Leuven, Belgium