@article{AsawapiromBulutFarrelletal.2004, author = {Asawapirom, Udom and Bulut, F. and Farrell, Tony and Gadermaier, C. and Gamerith, S. and G{\"u}ntner, Roland and Kietzke, Thomas and Patil, S. and Piok, T. and Montenegro, Rivelino V. D. and Stiller, Burkhard and Tiersch, Brigitte and Landfester, Katharina and List, E. J. W. and Neher, Dieter and Torres, C. S. and Scherf, Ullrich}, title = {Materials for polymer electronics applications semiconducting polymer thin films and nanoparticles}, issn = {1022-1360}, year = {2004}, abstract = {The paper presents two different approaches to nanostructured semiconducting polymer materials: (i) the generation of aqueous semiconducting polymer dispersions (semiconducting polymer nanospheres SPNs) and their processing into dense films and layers, and (ii) the synthesis of novel semiconducting polyfluorene-block-polyaniline (PF-b-PANI) block copolymers composed of conjugated blocks of different redox potentials which form nanosized morphologies in the solid state}, language = {en} } @article{StillerKarageorgievGeueetal.2004, author = {Stiller, Burkhard and Karageorgiev, Peter and Geue, Thomas and Morawetz, Knut and Saphiannikova, Marina and Mechau, Norman and Neher, Dieter}, title = {Optically induced mass transport studied by scanning near-field optical- and atomic force microscopy}, issn = {0204-3467}, year = {2004}, abstract = {Some functionalised thin organic films show a very unusual property, namely the light induced material transport. This effect enables to generate three-dimensional structures on surfaces of azobenzene containing films only caused by special optical excitation. The physical mechanisms underlying this phenomenon have not yet been fully understood, and in addition, the dimensions of structures created in that way are macroscopic because of the optical techniques and the wavelength of the used light. In order to gain deeper insight into the physical fundamentals of this phenomenon and to open possibilities for applications it is necessary to create and study structures not only in a macroscopic but also in nanometer range. We first report about experiments to generate optically induced nano structures even down to 100 nm size. The optical stimulation was therefore made by a Scanning Near-field Optical Microscope (SNOM). Secondly, physical conditions inside optically generated surface relief gratings were studied by measuring mechanical properties with high lateral resolution via pulse force mode and force distance curves of an AFM}, language = {en} }