Overview
- Authors:
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John F. Wager
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School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Oregon State University, Corvallis
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Douglas A. Keszler
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Department of Chemistry, Oregon State University, Corvallis
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Rick E. Presley
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School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Oregon State University, Corvallis
- First monograph on transparent electronics
- A technological perspective rather than a scientific focus
- Also of interest to researchers in printed electronics, large-area electronics, low-cost electronics and disposable electronics
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Table of contents (7 chapters)
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Front Matter
Pages I-VIII
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- John F. Wager, Douglas A. Keszler, Rick E. Presley
Pages 1-8
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- John F. Wager, Douglas A. Keszler, Rick E. Presley
Pages 9-37
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- John F. Wager, Douglas A. Keszler, Rick E. Presley
Pages 39-56
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- John F. Wager, Douglas A. Keszler, Rick E. Presley
Pages 57-82
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- John F. Wager, Douglas A. Keszler, Rick E. Presley
Pages 83-151
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- John F. Wager, Douglas A. Keszler, Rick E. Presley
Pages 153-182
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- John F. Wager, Douglas A. Keszler, Rick E. Presley
Pages 183-187
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Back Matter
Pages 190-212
About this book
A contemporary book devoted to the topic of transparent electronics would likely employ one of two formats – a monograph or an edited, mul- contributor compilation. Trade offs are inherent in the adoption of either of these options. A monograph is better suited to the pursuit of a unifying theme or vision, but only from a single perspective. An edited, mul- contributor compilation is typically more comprehensive and, by defi- tion, multi-perspective, but may suffer from a lack of coherence, especially when pursuing a topic as embryonic as transparent electronics. Future books on transparent electronics will likely be written utilizing both f- mats. This book is a monograph. Its defining theme is that transparent el- tronics development should be application-driven and, therefore, needs to be undertaken concurrently at the materials, process, device, circuit, and system levels. In support of this theme, background and overview inf- mation is provided in Chapters 1-2; applications are considered in Chapter 3; materials, devices, and circuits are explored in Chapters 4-6; and a p- liminary roadmap for continued development is offered in Chapter 7. As we go to press with this monograph, two final thoughts occur.