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Plastic light emitting devices

Transparent flexible plastic substrates for organic light-emitting devices Y. Hong, Z. He, N.S. Lennhoff, D.A. Banach, J. Kanicki Journal of Electronic Materials, 33 312-320... [Pg.299]

G. Gustafsson, G.M. Treacy, Y. Cao, F. Klavetter, N. Colaneri, and A.J. Heeger, The plastic LED a flexible light-emitting device using a polyaniline transparent electrode, Synth. Met., 57 4123-4127, 1993. [Pg.525]

S. Lee, A. Badano, and J. Kanicki, Monte Carlo modeling of organic polymer light-emitting devices on flexible plastic substrates, Proc. SPIE, 4800, 156-163, 2002. [Pg.615]

M.S. Weaver, L.A. Michalski, K. Rajan, M.A. Rothman, J.A. Silvernail, and J.J. Brown, Organic light emitting devices with extended operating lifetimes on plastic substrates, Appl. Phys. Lett., 81 2929-2931, 2002. [Pg.634]

Matyba P, Yamaguchi H, Eda G et al (2010) Graphene and mobile ions the key to all-plastic, solution-processed light-emitting devices. ACS Nano 4 637-642... [Pg.173]

S.-J. Lee, J. R. Gallegos, J. Klein, M. D. Curtis, and J. Kanicki. Poly(flu-orene-oxadiazole) copolymer-based light-emitting devices on a plastic substrate. Synth. Met, 155(1) 1-10, October 2005. [Pg.345]

Figure 3.10 J-V behavior of all-plastic light emitting diode. Triangles and squares are from the hole-only reference device and the all-piastic iight emitting diode with TDAE modified PEDOT-PSS respectiveiy. Reprinted with permission from Ref. 82, Copyright 2006 Eisevier B.V. All rights reserved. Figure 3.10 J-V behavior of all-plastic light emitting diode. Triangles and squares are from the hole-only reference device and the all-piastic iight emitting diode with TDAE modified PEDOT-PSS respectiveiy. Reprinted with permission from Ref. 82, Copyright 2006 Eisevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Major Applications Organic light emitting devices, electroluminescent devices, laser dyes, photography, plastic scintillation applications, 3 herbicides, eyeglass lenses, cosmetics Safety/Toxicity Endocrine disrupters " ... [Pg.188]

We report here the design and characterization of three simple, on-line radioisotope detectors for capillary electrophoresis. The first detector utilizes a commercially available semiconductor device responding directly to 7 rays or particles that pass through the walls of the fused silica separation channel. A similar semiconductor detector for 7-emitting radiopharmaceuticals separated by HPLC was reported by Needham and Delaney (XI). The second detector utilizes a commercially available plastic scintillator material that completely surrounds (360 ) the detection region of the separation channel. Light emitted by the plastic scintillator is collected and focused onto the photocathode of a cooled photomultiplier tube. Alternatively, a third detection scheme utilizes a disk fashioned from commercially available plastic scintillator material positioned between two-room temperature photomultiplier tubes operated in the coincidence counting mode. [Pg.62]


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