An electroactive pentathiophene surfactant containing a phosphonic acid head group was designed and shown to provide strong binding to the surface of a CdSe nanocrystal and facilitate charge transfer between the nanocrystal and an organic semiconducting matrix (see Figure). Incorporation into organic–inorganic heterojunction solar cells could improve the efficiency of these promising devices.
Branched water-soluble copolymers were obtained by direct radical crosslinking copolymerisation of acrylic acid or acrylamide and N,N'-methylenebisacrylamide at high solid content in the presence of an O-ethylxanthate as a reversible chain transfer agent.
Low-loss optical waveguides have been fabricated from fluorinated copolymers designed to
incorporate photochemical amplification based on acid catalysis. Core and cladding layers were made,
for single-mode (SM) channel waveguides, from the poly(pentafluorostyrene-co-glycidyl methacrylate)
copolymer series and, for multimode (MM) ridge waveguides, from poly(tert-butyl methacrylate-co-glycidyl
methacrylate) as the cladding and poly(pentafluorostyrene-co-glycidyl methacrylate) as core layer. The
reactivity ratios for PFS and GMA monomers have been measured to be r(PFS) = 0.38 ± 0.01 and r(GMA)
= 0.89 ± 0.01 in free radical polymerization. Variation of the copolymer composition allowed precise
control over the refractive index measured at 589, 633, 1320, and 1550 nm. These amorphous copolymers
were photo-cross-linked by contact printing and developed by wet etching to produce high quality ridge
waveguides with very smooth top surfaces. Low loss single-mode (SM) waveguides exhibit averaged losses
over eight channel waveguides as low as 0.39 dB/cm at 1320 nm and 0.42 dB/cm at 1550 nm. Thermal
properties have been examined and optical losses were measured after two different annealings at 200
and 250 °C for 1 h.
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