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Journal ArticleDOI

Electronic and optoelectronic materials and devices inspired by nature

TLDR
This short review article focuses primarily on organic and bio-organic electronic and optoelectronic systems derived from or inspired by nature, and outlines the complex charge transport and photo-physics which control their behaviour.
Abstract
Inorganic semiconductors permeate virtually every sphere of modern human existence. Micro-fabricated memory elements, processors, sensors, circuit elements, lasers, displays, detectors, etc are ubiquitous. However, the dawn of the 21st century has brought with it immense new challenges, and indeed opportunities—some of which require a paradigm shift in the way we think about resource use and disposal, which in turn directly impacts our ongoing relationship with inorganic semiconductors such as silicon and gallium arsenide. Furthermore, advances in fields such as nano-medicine and bioelectronics, and the impending revolution of the ‘ubiquitous sensor network’, all require new functional materials which are bio-compatible, cheap, have minimal embedded manufacturing energy plus extremely low power consumption, and are mechanically robust and flexible for integration with tissues, building structures, fabrics and all manner of hosts. In this short review article we summarize current progress in creating materials with such properties. We focus primarily on organic and bio-organic electronic and optoelectronic systems derived from or inspired by nature, and outline the complex charge transport and photo-physics which control their behaviour. We also introduce the concept of electrical devices based upon ion or proton flow (‘ionics and protonics’) and focus particularly on their role as a signal interface with biological systems. Finally, we highlight recent advances in creating working devices, some of which have bio-inspired architectures, and summarize the current issues, challenges and potential solutions. This is a rich new playground for the modern materials physicist.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Organic Optoelectronic Materials: Mechanisms and Applications

TL;DR: The article reviews the current understanding of the physical mechanisms that determine the (opto)electronic properties of high-performance organic materials and highlights the capabilities of various experimental techniques for characterization, summarizes top-of-the-line device performance, and outlines recent trends in the further development of the field.
Journal ArticleDOI

"Green" electronics: biodegradable and biocompatible materials and devices for sustainable future.

TL;DR: This Review will highlight recent research advancements in this emerging group of materials and their integration in unconventional organic electronic devices.
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25th Anniversary Article: A Soft Future: From Robots and Sensor Skin to Energy Harvesters

TL;DR: This review discusses soft robots which allow actuation with several degrees of freedom, and shows that different actuation mechanisms lead to similar actuators, capable of complex and smooth movements in 3d space.
Journal ArticleDOI

Organic Photodiodes: The Future of Full Color Detection and Image Sensing

TL;DR: Organic photodiodes (OPDs) are beginning to rival their inorganic counterparts in a number of performance criteria including the linear dynamic range, detectivity, and color selectivity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Polydopamine and eumelanin: from structure-property relationships to a unified tailoring strategy

TL;DR: Rational tailoring strategies directed to critical control points of the synthetic pathways, such as dopaquinone, DAquinone, and dopachrome are proposed, with a view to translating basic chemical knowledge into practical guidelines for material manipulation and tailoring.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A low-cost, high-efficiency solar cell based on dye-sensitized colloidal TiO2 films

TL;DR: In this article, the authors describe a photovoltaic cell, created from low-to medium-purity materials through low-cost processes, which exhibits a commercially realistic energy-conversion efficiency.
Journal ArticleDOI

Absence of Diffusion in Certain Random Lattices

TL;DR: In this article, a simple model for spin diffusion or conduction in the "impurity band" is presented, which involves transport in a lattice which is in some sense random, and in them diffusion is expected to take place via quantum jumps between localized sites.
Journal ArticleDOI

The missing memristor found

TL;DR: It is shown, using a simple analytical example, that memristance arises naturally in nanoscale systems in which solid-state electronic and ionic transport are coupled under an external bias voltage.
Journal ArticleDOI

Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells

TL;DR: Dye-sensitized solar cells (DSCs) offer the possibilities to design solar cells with a large flexibility in shape, color, and transparency as mentioned in this paper, and many DSC research groups have been established around the world.
Book

Electronic processes in non-crystalline materials

TL;DR: The Fermi Glass and the Anderson Transition as discussed by the authorsermi glass and Anderson transition have been studied in the context of non-crystalline Semiconductors, such as tetrahedrally-bonded semiconductors.
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