20 July, 2020
Congratulations Afnan AlBatati!Congratulations to Afnan Batati for successfully defending her Master's thesis defense. Afnan, will continue her work as a PhD student on nanogaps within the LAMA group.
06 July, 2020
Recent paper on "Rapid Photonic Processing of High Electron Mobility PbS Colloidal Quantum Dots Transistors"Recent paper on "Rapid Photonic Processing of High Electron Mobility PbS Colloidal Quantum Dots Transistors" is out in ACS-Applied Materials & Interfaces journal.
03 July, 2020
Congrats to Dr.Emilie Dauzon !Many congratulations to Emily Dauzon for successfully defending her PhD thesis on "Flexible and stretchable organic materials and devices for application in emerging optoelectronics". All the best in the future!
18 June, 2020
Recent paper on Stretchable and Transparent Conductive PEDOT: PSS‐Based Electrodes for Organic Photovoltaics and Strain Sensors ApplicationsCongrats to Emilie Dauzon and co-authors for their recent paper on Stretchable and Transparent Conductive PEDOT: PSS‐Based Electrodes for Organic Photovoltaics and Strain Sensors Applications published in Advanced Functional Materials.
16 June, 2020
A new paper on Photonic Curing Advanced Electronic Materials by Emre Yarali and co-authorsCongratulations Emre Yarali and co-authors for their recent paper on Advanced Electronic Materials titled "Low‐Voltage Heterojunction Metal Oxide Transistors via Rapid Photonic Processing".
02 March, 2020
A new paper just published in Advanced Functional Materials by Dounya Barrit et al.Our paper titled "Room‐Temperature Partial Conversion of α‐FAPbI3 Perovskite Phase via PbI2 Solvation Enables High‐Performance Solar Cells" has recently been published in Advanced Functional Materials.
This work provides new design rules toward the room‐temperature phase transformation and processing of hybrid perovskite films based on FA+ cation without the need for Cs+ or mixed halide formulation.
11 February, 2020
KAUST Discovery: Hybrid transistor improves next-generation displaysA simple, cost-effective technique uses solution-based printing to make better ultrathin transistors.