In organic electronics solution‐processable n‐channel field‐effect transistors (FETs) matching the parameters of the best p‐channel FETs are needed. Progress toward the fabrication of such devices is strongly impeded by a limited number of suitable organic semiconductors as well as by the lack of processing techniques that enable strict control of the supramolecular organization in the deposited layer. Here, the use of N,N′‐bis(4‐n‐butylphenyl)‐1,4,5,8‐naphthalenetetracarboxylic‐1,4:5,8‐bisimide (NBI‐4‐n‐BuPh) for fabrication of n‐channel FETs is described. The unidirectionally oriented crystalline layers of NBI‐4‐n‐BuPh are obtained by the zone‐casting method under ambient conditions. Due to the bottom‐contact, top‐gate configuration used, the gate dielectric, Parylene C, also acts as a protective layer. This, together with a sufficiently low LUMO level of NBI‐4‐n‐BuPh allows the fabrication and operation of these novel n‐channel transistors under ambient conditions. The high order of the NBI‐4‐n‐BuPh molecules in the zone‐cast layer and high purity of the gate dielectric yield good performance of the transistors.
New tetraester derivatives of 1,4,5,8-tetraazaanthracene have been prepared and characterized by spectroscopic and electrochemical techniques. The LUMO level of the compounds is close to -4 eV (the so-called air operating stability border in n-channel field effect transistors). Tetraesters were obtained with reasonable yields without the necessity of using high-quality reactants or solvents, resulting in their low cost.
Endothelial cells, due to their location, are interesting objects for atomic force spectroscopy study. They constitute a barrier between blood and vessel tissues located deeper, and therefore they are the first line of contact with various substances present in blood, eg, drugs or nanoparticles. This work intends to verify whether the mechanical response of immortalized human umbilical vein endothelial cells (EA.hy926), when exposed to silver nanoparticles, as measured using force spectroscopy, could be effectively used as a bio-indicator of the physiological state of the cells. Silver nanoparticles were characterized with transmission electron microscopy and dynamic light scattering techniques. Tetrazolium salt reduction test was used to determine cell viability after treatment with silver nanoparticles. An elasticity of native cells was examined in the Hanks' buffer whereas fixed cells were softly fixed with formaldehyde. Additional aspect of the work is the comparative force spectroscopy utilizing AFM probes of ball-shape and conical geometries, in order to understand what changes in cell elasticity, caused by SNPs, were detectable with each probe. As a supplement to elasticity studies, cell morphology observation by atomic force microscopy and detection of silver nanoparticles inside cells using transmission electron microscopy were also performed. Cells exposed to silver nanoparticles at the highest selected concentrations (3.6 μg/mL, 16 μg/mL) are less elastic. It may be associated with the reorganization of the cellular cytoskeleton and the "strengthening" of the cell cortex caused by presence of silver nanoparticles. This observation does not depend on cell fixation. Agglomerates of silver nanoparticles were observed on the cell membrane as well as inside the cells.
Charge-carrier transport in the channel of bottom gate, top contact organic field effect transistors with anisotropic layers of 6,13-bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl) pentacene (TIPS-Pentacene) obtained by zone casting was investigated using scanning Kelvin probe microscopy combined with atomic force microscopy. The TIPS-Pentacene continuous layers consisted of thin crystals unidirectionally oriented in the channel. Devices with perpendicular and parallel charge flow in the transistor channel were prepared. It was found that irregularities in the surface morphology at the semiconductor layer in the transistor channel are correlated with the local potential profile, and that the channel resistance strongly depends on the orientation of the TIPS-Pentacene crystals.
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