Conjugated
Polymers and Molecular Solids
Professor Sir Richard Friend, with
Dr Neil Greenham,
Prof Henning Sirringhaus,
Dr Richard Phillips, & numerous postdoctoral fellows &
research students
Conjugated polymers with delocalized "pi"-electron systems behave
as model organic semiconductors. A broad programme of research
on this topic exists in the Cavendish and Department of Chemistry
(Dr A B Holmes). Activities range from design and synthesis of
new polymers through to their use in a variety of devices. Our
main interest in the Cavendish is the semiconductor physics of
these materials, which is very different from that of inorganic
semiconductors and which gives strong electro-optical and non-linear
optical responses. A range of device-related projects are in progress.
(a) Field-effect devices show large changes in optical properties
as a consequence of charge injection (b) Polymer light-emitting diodes
(LEDs) were first made in Cambridge using poly(phenylene vinylene),
and the performance of these LEDs - now using poly(fluorenes) - has risen to surpass that of
visible emitting inorganic devices. (c) Photovoltaic and photoconductive
diodes can show high efficiency if heterojunctions between polymer
layers are used to achieve charge separation. (d) Sub-picosecond
time-resolved spectroscopy is used to study formation and evolution
of polaronic electronic excitations.
We have formerly worked on molecular solids. These provide a range of materials with which to
study Peierls instability and strong Coulomb interactions occurring
as a result of reduced dimensionality. Directional bonding between
molecular units can be arranged to give either one-dimensional
(stacks) or two-dimensional (sheets) properties. Work in the Cavendish
was in collaboration with chemistry groups at the Royal Institution
and the University of Wales, Bangor. Interests included the study
of ferromagnetism, anti-magnetism, and the spin-Peierls transition,
in addition to metallic and superconducting properties.
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