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Color collective: polymer self-assembles into light-emitting film.


In the past year or so, organic light-emitting diodes Noun 1. organic light-emitting diode - a self-luminous diode (it glows when an electrical field is applied to the electrodes) that does not require backlighting or diffusers
OLED
 have appeared in a handful of products, such as the tiny screens in some cell phones and digital cameras. Manufacturing large and long-lasting flexible displays for computer screens and flat-panel televisions, however, is expected to require new and improved organic materials.

To create displays that are more efficient and more luminescent lu·mi·nes·cent  
adj.
Capable of, suitable for, or exhibiting luminescence.



[Latin lmen, l
 than existing technologies based on organic substances, researchers are turning to organic molecules that self-assemble into cell membrane-like structures. Samuel Stupp and his colleagues at Northwestern University Northwestern University, mainly at Evanston, Ill.; coeducational; chartered 1851, opened 1855 by Methodists. In 1873 it absorbed Evanston College for Ladies. . in Evanston, Ill., have now devised a way to enhance the electronic and optical properties of a polymer that is widely used for making organic light-emitting diodes.

In standard polymer films, molecules are randomly oriented. To avoid that, the researchers engineered the polymer molecules to automatically assume an organized liquid-crystal structure when mixed in water. The group attached different small appendages to the ends of the polymer molecules. They put a water-repelling molecule at one end and a water-attracting molecule on the other.

When mixed with water and poured onto a glass surface, the modified polymer molecules assembled into sheets that resembled cell membranes Cell membrane

The membrane that surrounds the cytoplasm of a cell; it is also called the plasma membrane or, in a more general sense, a unit membrane. This is a very thin, semifluid, sheetlike structure made of four continuous monolayers of molecules.
. Also, the sheets stacked on top of each to create a film hundred of nanometers thick.

"By controlling the orientation of the restore urinary control molecules within the film, we can control the material's conductivity and luminescence luminescence, general term applied to all forms of cool light, i.e., light emitted by sources other than a hot, incandescent body, such as a black body radiator. ," says the team's James F. Hulvat. For example, because the film's molecules are packed tightly and aligned, electrical charges in the resulting structure move through the material more efficiently than they do through disordered polymer films. At the same time, the highly ordered assemblies harbor fewer defects that can quench quench,
v to cool a hot object rapidly by plunging it into water or oil.


quench

to put out, extinguish, or suppress; to cool (as hot metal) by immersing in water.
 the material's luminescence.

The researchers also found that varying the length of the water-attracting appendages caused the resulting films to produce different colors. Shorter chains resulted in films that glowed green, while longer chains made the films appear blue.

Scott Watkins of the University of Melbourne
  • AsiaWeek is now discontinued.
Comments:

In 2006, Times Higher Education Supplement ranked the University of Melbourne 22nd in the world. Because of the drop in ranking, University of Melbourne is currently behind four Asian universities - Beijing University,
 in Australia says that this is an important strategy for maximizing the efficiencies and lifetimes of organic light-emitting materials. "Without self-assembly, you'd have to go through multiple processing steps" to get the same result, he says.

The next step, says Hulvat, will be to produce an actual organic light-emitting diode, which glows when stimulated electrically. The Northwestern group is also working to make solar cells out of its new materials. By coating the hydrophilic hydrophilic /hy·dro·phil·ic/ (-fil´ik) readily absorbing moisture; hygroscopic; having strongly polar groups that readily interact with water.

hy·dro·phil·ic
adj.
 segments of the film with a semiconductor, the researchers plan to create alternating layers of organic and inorganic materials.

The researchers presented their polymer films on Dec. 2 at the Materials Research Society Meeting in Boston. A detailed report will appear in an upcoming Journal of the American Chemical Society
For the Joint Academic Classification of Subjects system, see Joint Academic Classification of Subjects.

The Journal of the American Chemical Society (usually abbreviated as J. Am. Chem. Soc.
.
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Title Annotation:This Week
Author:Goho, A.
Publication:Science News
Geographic Code:1U3IL
Date:Dec 11, 2004
Words:448
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