Technische Universität Dresden (TUD)
Helmholtzstrasse 10
01609 Dresden
Germany
TUD has about 35,000 students and almost 4,200 permanent employees (excepting the Faculty of Medicine), 419 professors among them, and, thus, is the largest university in Saxony, today. The Institut für Angewandte Photophysik (IAPP) is an institute of TUD.
The Organic Devices group within the IAPP currently consists of approx. 15 scientists at different level (PhD or Post-Doc). IAPP expertise spans from the investigation of the molecular properties over the study of molecular epitaxy, to the preparation and electro-optical investigation of optoelectronic devices. Special focus is on electrical doping for efficient organic devices, using novel molecular dopants. Experimental tools and techniques available are: i) two cluster tool with multisouce evaporation, ii) all standard electrical and optical characterization techniques, iii) UPS/XPS, and iv) Femtosecond spectroscopy.
Verbatime
"Organic electronics is a rapidly growing new technology currently at the threshold of basic research to industrial implementation on a large scale. It allows for flexible and light weight devices and has the potential for low cost manufacturing and meet the challenges for a "green" earth."
About us
Our institute has a wide range of interests covering organic solar cells, organic light emitting diodes as well as organic memories. About 60 scientists work in active collaboration with many research centres and companies on research themes from understanding of the basic optoelectronic properties of organic semiconductors to design and process technologies for high efficiency devices. Special focus is on electrical doping of vacuum deposited small molecule organic devices.


