Measurements are reported on the magnetization reversal in submicron magnetic rings fabricated by high-resolution electron beam lithography and lift-off from cobalt thin films. For all dimensions investigated, with diameters of 300-800 nm and a thickness of 10-50 nm, the flux closure state is the stable magnetization configuration. However, with increasing diameter and decreasing film thickness a metastable near single domain state can be obtained during the reversal process in an in-plane applied field.
We have fabricated organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) using a microcontact printing technique (μCP) that employs thin polydimethylsiloxane stamps on a rigid silicon substrate in order to reduce macroscopic distortions. Systematic variation of the printing pressure, printing time, and concentration of eicosanethiol, the “molecular ink” in the μCP process, permits the fabrication of devices with smaller channel lengths (Leff) than nominally defined by the stamp. Interdigitated Ti/Au electrode structures with Leff down to 100 nm could be fabricated which, after additional surface treatment and vacuum deposition of αα′-dihexylquaterthiophene, yield OTFTs with excellent characteristics.
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