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Electrochromic organic and polymeric materials for display applications

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journal contribution
posted on 2006-03-13, 11:12 authored by Roger J. Mortimer, Aubrey L. Dyer, John R. Reynolds
An electrochromic material is one where a reversible color change takes place upon reduction (gain of electrons) or oxidation (loss of electrons), on passage of electrical current after the application of an appropriate electrode potential. In this review the general field of electrochromism is introduced, with coverage of the types, applications, and chemical classes of electrochromic materials and the experimental methods that are used in their study. The main classes of electrochromic organic and polymeric materials are then surveyed, with descriptions of representative examples based on transition metal coordination complexes, viologen systems, and conducting polymers. Examples of the application of such organic and polymeric electrochromic materials in electrochromic displays are given.

History

School

  • Science

Department

  • Chemistry

Pages

425790 bytes

Citation

MORTIMER, R.J., DYER, A.L. and REYNOLDS, J.R., 2006. Electrochromic organic and polymeric materials for display applications. Displays, 27, pp. 2-18

Publisher

© Elsevier

Publication date

2006

Notes

This article has been published in the journal, Displays [© Elsevier]. The definitive version is available at: http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/01419382.

ISSN

0141-9382

Language

  • en