1st Edition

Light-Active Functional Organic Materials

Edited By Hiroko Yamada, Shiki Yagai Copyright 2019
    236 Pages 22 Color & 101 B/W Illustrations
    by Jenny Stanford Publishing

    236 Pages 22 Color & 101 B/W Illustrations
    by Jenny Stanford Publishing

    Inspired by naturally occurring light-active molecular systems such as photosynthesis, scientists have long devoted their efforts to understanding how light and molecules interact. Based on a raft of knowledge on light absorption, energy migration and electron transfer, fluorescence and phosphorescence, and various photochemical reactions, light can now be utilized for energy conversion, information storage, medical applications, and development of next-generation photofunctional materials that cannot be obtained via conventional organic synthesis.

    This book overviews some of the cutting-edge p-conjugated molecular and polymer materials for organic photovoltaics, artificial photosynthesis, and organic light-emitting devices. It gives insights into the interactions between light and molecules and discusses sophisticated molecular designs, self-assembly and self-organization strategies, and state-of-the-art unconventional analytical methods.

    1. Soft Materials: Ultra-Flexible, Fluidic, Optoelectronically-Active Molecular/Polymeric Materials

    A. Shinohara, C. Pan, and T. Nakanishi 

    2. Rigid–Flexible Hybrid Design for Photofunctional Molecules and Materials

    S. Saito 

    3. Optical Microresonators from π-Conjugated Polymers

    Y. Yamamoto 

    4. Hydrogen-Bond-Directed Nanostructurization of Oligothiophene Semiconductors for Organic Photovoltaics

     X. Lin, H. Ouchi, and S. Yagai  

    5. Fundamental Optoelectronic Process in Polymer–Fullerene Heterojunctions

    A. Saeki 

    6. Hard Materials: Near-Infrared Dyes Based on Ring-Expanded Porphyrins with No Meso-Bridges

    T. Okujima 

    7. Gold Isocyanide Complexes Exhibiting Luminescent Mechanochromism and Phase Transitions

    T. Seki and H. Ito  

    8. Thermally Activated Delayed Fluorescence (TADF) Materials for Organic Light-Emitting Devices

    K. Matsuo, N. Aizawa, and T. Yasuda 

    9. α-Diketone-Type Precursors of Acenes for Solution-Processed Organic Solar Cells

    M. Suzuki and H. Yamada 

    10. Photochemical Synthesis of Phenacenes and Their Application to Organic Semiconductors

    H. Okamoto and Y. Kubozono

    Biography

    Hiroko Yamada is full professor at Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST), Japan. She received her PhD from Kyoto University, Japan, in 1992. She joined Ehime University, Japan, as associate professor in 2003 after working in Ciba-Geigy Japan Ltd. and as a postdoc in Osaka University, Japan. She moved to NAIST in 2011 and was promoted to the rank of full professor in 2012. Prof. Yamada was also a PRESTO researcher of JST during 2006–2009 and has received the Japanese Photochemistry Association Award (2012) and the Chemical Society of Japan Award for Creative Work (2018). Her research areas are organic chemistry, organic photochemistry, and organic electrochemistry.

    Shiki Yagai is full professor at Chiba University, Japan. He received his PhD from Ritsumeikan University, Japan, in 2002. He joined Chiba University as assistant professor soon after and subsequently became an associate professor in 2010. He was promoted to the rank of full professor in 2017. Prof. Yagai was a PRESTO researcher of JST during 2006–2009 and was awarded the Chemical Society of Japan Award for Young Chemists (2010), Young Scientist Commendation for Science and Technology from the Minister of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology (2011), and Swiss Chemical Society Lectureships (2017). His current research focuses on supramolecular functional materials.

    "The book presents current reviews on a wide range of organic materials having in common their response to or production of light. It focuses on the challenge of making a flexible material with good optoelectronic properties and explores hybrid rigid/flexible systems. It reviews optical microresonators, nanostructure-based organic semiconductors, polymer/fullerene interfaces, near-infrared dyes, and luminescent gold isocyanide complexes, along with LEDs based on thermally activated delayed fluorescence, which promise to approach the efficiency of more expensive inorganic LEDs. Lastly, it discusses the progress with acenes and phenacenes (large aromatic molecules used to develop organic semiconductors). The book authors, who are all active principal investigators in Japan, have presented a well-written text that is generously illustrated throughout." - Prof. L. C. Davis, CHOICE