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Author

Werner Weber

Other affiliations: Qimonda, Siemens
Bio: Werner Weber is an academic researcher from Infineon Technologies. The author has contributed to research in topics: Transistor & Amplifier. The author has an hindex of 20, co-authored 119 publications receiving 2782 citations. Previous affiliations of Werner Weber include Qimonda & Siemens.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a spin-coated polymer gate dielectric layer was used to obtain a polyvinylphenol-based copolymer-based transistor with a carrier mobility as large as 3 cm2/V's and sub-threshold swing as low as 0.5 V/decade.
Abstract: We have fabricated pentacene organic thin film transistors with spin-coated polymer gate dielectric layers, including cross-linked polyvinylphenol and a polyvinylphenol-based copolymer, and obtained devices with excellent electrical characteristics, including carrier mobility as large as 3 cm2/V s, subthreshold swing as low as 1.2 V/decade, and on/off current ratio of 105. For comparison, we have also fabricated pentacene transistors using thermally grown silicon dioxide as the gate dielectric and obtained carrier mobilities as large as 1 cm2/V s and subthreshold swing as low as 0.5 V/decade.

1,225 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors have fabricated organic thin-film transistors and integrated circuits based on the small-molecule organic semiconductors α,α′-didecylquaterthiophene, α,βββδδ Δ-Didecylsexithiophene.
Abstract: We have fabricated organic thin-film transistors and integrated circuits based on the small-molecule organic semiconductors α,α′-didecylquaterthiophene, α,α′-didecylquinquethiophene, and α,α′-didecylsexithiophene. The organic semiconductors were deposited by thermal evaporation, with solution-processed and cross linked poly-4-vinylphenol serving as the gate dielectric layer. We have found that bottom-contact devices based on these materials have better electrical performance than top-contact devices, presumably due to more efficient carrier injection from bottom contacts due to the presence of the relatively long alkyl chains substituted at the α- and ω-positions of the oligothiophene molecules. Bottom-contact transistors have carrier mobility as large as 0.5 cm2/V s and on/off current ratio as large as 105, and ring oscillators fabricated using bottom-contact transistors and α,α′-didecylsexithiophene as the organic active layer have signal propagation delay as low as 30 μs per stage.

110 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
09 Feb 2003
TL;DR: In this paper, a silicon-based micromachined thermoelectric generator chip for energy harvesting from body heat, and an interwoven antenna concept for textile radio frequency identification labels are presented.
Abstract: Enabling technologies for 'wearable electronics', such as packaging and interconnect, are the key to the integration of electronics in textiles. A silicon-based micromachined thermoelectric generator chip for energy harvesting from body heat, and an interwoven antenna concept for textile radio frequency identification labels are presented.

93 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
Chengliang Wang1, Huanli Dong1, Wenping Hu1, Yunqi Liu1, Daoben Zhu1 
TL;DR: The focus of this review will be on the performance analysis of π-conjugated systems in OFETs, a kind of device consisting of an organic semiconducting layer, a gate insulator layer, and three terminals that provide an important insight into the charge transport of ρconjugate systems.
Abstract: Since the discovery of highly conducting polyacetylene by Shirakawa, MacDiarmid, and Heeger in 1977, π-conjugated systems have attracted much attention as futuristic materials for the development and production of the next generation of electronics, that is, organic electronics. Conceptually, organic electronics are quite different from conventional inorganic solid state electronics because the structural versatility of organic semiconductors allows for the incorporation of functionality by molecular design. This versatility leads to a new era in the design of electronic devices. To date, the great number of π-conjugated semiconducting materials that have either been discovered or synthesized generate an exciting library of π-conjugated systems for use in organic electronics. 11 However, some key challenges for further advancement remain: the low mobility and stability of organic semiconductors, the lack of knowledge regarding structure property relationships for understanding the fundamental chemical aspects behind the structural design, and realization of desired properties. Organic field-effect transistors (OFETs) are a kind of device consisting of an organic semiconducting layer, a gate insulator layer, and three terminals (drain, source, and gate electrodes). OFETs are not only essential building blocks for the next generation of cheap and flexible organic circuits, but they also provide an important insight into the charge transport of πconjugated systems. Therefore, they act as strong tools for the exploration of the structure property relationships of πconjugated systems, such as parameters of field-effect mobility (μ, the drift velocity of carriers under unit electric field), current on/off ratio (the ratio of the maximum on-state current to the minimum off-state current), and threshold voltage (the minimum gate voltage that is required to turn on the transistor). 17 Since the discovery of OFETs in the 1980s, they have attracted much attention. Research onOFETs includes the discovery, design, and synthesis of π-conjugated systems for OFETs, device optimization, development of applications in radio frequency identification (RFID) tags, flexible displays, electronic papers, sensors, and so forth. It is beyond the scope of this review to cover all aspects of π-conjugated systems; hence, our focus will be on the performance analysis of π-conjugated systems in OFETs. This should make it possible to extract information regarding the fundamental merit of semiconducting π-conjugated materials and capture what is needed for newmaterials and what is the synthesis orientation of newπ-conjugated systems. In fact, for a new science with many practical applications, the field of organic electronics is progressing extremely rapidly. For example, using “organic field effect transistor” or “organic field effect transistors” as the query keywords to search the Web of Science citation database, it is possible to show the distribution of papers over recent years as shown in Figure 1A. It is very clear

2,942 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Integration of organic transistors and rubber pressure sensors, both of which can be produced by low-cost processing technology such as large-area printing technology, will provide an ideal solution to realize a practical artificial skin.
Abstract: It is now widely accepted that skin sensitivity will be very important for future robots used by humans in daily life for housekeeping and entertainment purposes Despite this fact, relatively little progress has been made in the field of pressure recognition compared to the areas of sight and voice recognition, mainly because good artificial “electronic skin” with a large area and mechanical flexibility is not yet available The fabrication of a sensitive skin consisting of thousands of pressure sensors would require a flexible switching matrix that cannot be realized with present silicon-based electronics Organic field-effect transistors can substitute for such conventional electronics because organic circuits are inherently flexible and potentially ultralow in cost even for a large area Thus, integration of organic transistors and rubber pressure sensors, both of which can be produced by low-cost processing technology such as large-area printing technology, will provide an ideal solution to realize a practical artificial skin, whose feasibility has been demonstrated in this paper Pressure images have been taken by flexible active matrix drivers with organic transistors whose mobility reaches as high as 14 cm2/V·s The device is electrically functional even when it is wrapped around a cylindrical bar with a 2-mm radius

1,804 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: New approaches to add functionality were developed to improve the processability of these materials in solution, allowing the synthesis of acenes larger than pentacene, which have hitherto been largely unavailable and poorly studied.
Abstract: Acenes have long been the subject of intense study because of the unique electronic properties associated with their pi-bond topology. Recent reports of impressive semiconductor properties of larger homologues have reinvigorated research in this field, leading to new methods for their synthesis, functionalization, and purification, as well as for fabricating organic electronic components. Studies performed on high-purity acene single crystals revealed their intrinsic electronic properties and provide useful benchmarks for thin film device research. New approaches to add functionality were developed to improve the processability of these materials in solution. These new functionalization strategies have recently allowed the synthesis of acenes larger than pentacene, which have hitherto been largely unavailable and poorly studied, as well as investigation of their associated structure/property relationships.

1,741 citations