Organic Electronic Fabrication and Investigation of Organic Magnetoresistance
Abstract
The field of organic electronics has advanced in recent years to
create new devices for both display and memory-storage
technology. Our research investigates organic magnetoresistance
(OMAR) in organic semiconductors, specifically organic light
emitting diodes (OLED). In the past we have carried out
fabrication and measurement at the University of Iowa. To study
OLEDs here at UW-Eau Claire requires the design and
manufacturing of new equipment and for us to develop creative
fabrication methods which take advantage of the facilities we
have on campus. A specimen holder was designed using
computer aided drafting and modeling and then fabricated using
an automated mill and metal lathe. The OLEDs were designed
using evaporative deposition techniques for the organic layer
(Alq3), the Calcium cathode, and finally an Aluminum coating on
an etched indium-tin-oxide coated glass slide. The geometry of
the specimens is as such that numerous devises can be placed on
a single slide. Lastly, to control our experiment and for data
acquisition, a LabView program was utilized.
Subject
Posters
Electronics
Organic electronics
LED lights
Light emitting diodes
Organic magnetoresistance
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/80075Type
Presentation
Description
Color poster with text, images, and graphs.

