报告题目:Organic
Electronics and Optoelectronics: Enabling new Energy and Information Technologies
报告人:Prof. Samson
A. Jenekhe
邀请人:高德青 教授
报告时间:8月10日(周五)10:00
报告地点:科技创新大楼C501室
Abstract
Organic and polymer
semiconductors have emerged as the foundation for a range of new electronic and
optoelectronic technologies including organic light-emitting diodes for
displays and solid-state lighting, thin film transistors for printed and
flexible electronics, various sensors, and low cost solar cells. Our work is
focused on the molecular engineering of materials and devices, encompassing synthesis,
processing, solid-state structure, properties, structure-property
relationships, and device applications of both p-type and n-type semiconducting
organic and polymeric materials. In this lecture I will discuss several examples
of our recent advances in these areas, including: (1) n-type small-molecule semiconductors
for efficient non-fullerene polymer solar cells; (2) n-type polymer
semiconductors for developing all-polymer solar cells; (3) n-type polymer
semiconductors for high-mobility transistors, complementary circuits, and
electronic memories; and (4) graphene nanoribbons for future carbon-based
ultrafast electronics and information technologies.
Biography

Samson A. Jenekhe holds the Boeing-Martin Endowed Professor of Chemical
Engineering and Professor of Chemistry at the University of Washington. He
graduated from Michigan Technological University with a BS degree in 1977. His
graduate studies were at the University of Minnesota where he received the MS
(Chemical Engineering, 1980), MA (Philosophy, 1981) and PhD (Chemical
Engineering, 1985). Following appointments at Honeywell, Inc., Physical Sciences
Center, Minneapolis, MN he started his academic career at the University of
Rochester, where held the positions of Assistant, Associate, and Full Professor
of Chemical Engineering, Professor of Materials Science, and Professor of
Chemistry during 1988-2000. He assumed his current positions at the University
of Washington in September 2000. His broad research interests are in the
chemistry, physics, and engineering applications of conjugated polymers, organic
semiconductors, electronic and optoelectronic devices, materials and devices
for solar energy technologies, self-assembly and soft nanotechnology, and
polymer science. He has served on the Editorial Advisory Boards of many
journals, including Macromolecules, Chemistry of Materials, Chemical Engineering Journal, and Micro- and Nano-systems. He is an
Editorial Board member of Molecular
Systems Design and Engineering, a journal from the Royal Society of
Chemistry and Institution
of Chemical Engineers (IChemE).
His research accomplishments are summarized
in over 300 journal articles, which have received over 33,900 citations with
h-index of 103, according to Google Scholar. He has also edited three books and
was awarded over 30 US patents. Thomson Reuters (Science Watch, March
2011) named him among the top 40 on their worldwide list of “Top 100 Materials
Scientists of the Past Decade, 2000-2010.” Thomson Reuters, and subsequently, Clarivate
Analytics have also named Jenekhe a Highly Cited Researcher in materials
science.
He is a Fellow of the American Association
for the Advancement of Science (2003), the American Physical Society (2003) and
the Royal Society of Chemistry (2015). He was elected member of the Washington
State Academy of Sciences in 2013. He is the recipient of the 2014 Charles M.
A. Stine Award from the American Institute of Chemical Engineers (AIChE).