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Special Polymers for Electronics and Optoelectronics

✍ Scribed by R. S. Sethi, M. T. Goosey (auth.), J. A. Chilton, M. T. Goosey C.CHEM., FRSC, FIM (eds.)


Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Year
1995
Tongue
English
Leaves
373
Edition
1
Category
Library

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✦ Synopsis


Commercially successful fully synthetic polymeric materials were proΒ­ duced in the early years of this century, the first example being Bakelite. This was made from phenol and formaldehyde by Leo Bakeland in 1909. Before the end of the 1920s, a large number of other synthetic polymers had been created, including polyvinyl chloride and urea-formaldehyde. Today, there are literally hundreds of synthetic polymers commercially available with ranges of properties making them suitable for applications in many industrial sectors, including the electrical and electronics industries. In many instances the driving force behind the development of new materials actually came from the electronics industry, and today's advanced electronics would be inconceivable without these materials. For many years polymers have been widely used in all sectors of the electronics industry. From the early days of the semiconductor industry to the current state of the art, polymers have provided the enabling technologies that have fuelled the inexorable and rapid development of advanced electronic and optoelectronic devices.

✦ Table of Contents


Front Matter....Pages i-xxiv
Conductive polymers....Pages 1-36
Electrodepositable resists....Pages 37-80
Polymeric Langmuirβ€”Blodgett films....Pages 81-130
Nonlinear materials....Pages 131-185
Ferroelectric polymers....Pages 186-220
Electroactive composites....Pages 221-255
Thermotropic liquid crystal polymers....Pages 256-283
Photoconductive polymers....Pages 284-314
Polymers for optical data storage....Pages 315-341
Back Matter....Pages 342-351

✦ Subjects


Characterization and Evaluation of Materials; Optical and Electronic Materials; Electrical Engineering


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