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Organic transistor improves with age

Posted December 03, 2007 10:46 AM

From New Scientist - Latest Headlines:

Ageing may be as important to electronics as it is to good wine. A plastic transistor doubles its performance if simply left to sit at room temperature for a week. Cheap to mould, pentacene transistors are a promising candidate for organic electronics. However, when they are being built, molecules can misalign to form defects, which trap electrons and slow the transistors down. Now Wolfgang Kalb's team at the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology in Zurich has found that if a newly made pentacene transistor is left to sit in a vacuum, the defects disappear naturally. Self-healing typically requires heat, but in pentacene the "jostling" between molecules that occurs at room temperature is enough to realign the molecules and remove the defects.

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Re: Organic transistor improves with age

12/03/2007 10:01 PM

Interesting article, thanks.

Unfortunately the article does not state whether those defects remain permanently "removed" after time.

The random motion of molecules would probably get those defects, or similar defects, back after some further time elapsed.....

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