Skip to main content
U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government

Official websites use .gov
A .gov website belongs to an official government organization in the United States.

Secure .gov websites use HTTPS
A lock ( ) or https:// means you’ve safely connected to the .gov website. Share sensitive information only on official, secure websites.

Lee J Richter (Assoc)

Lee Richter's research interests lie in the application of optical diagnostics to the study of time-dependent processes occurring at interfaces. He has participated in a series of collaborative research studies that utilized state-resolved gas-phase diagnostics (both laser-induced fluorescence and resonance-enhanced multiphoton ionization) to characterized the energy disposal in the gas phase products arising from surface photochemical events, both photodissociation and photodesorption. These studies employed UHV techniques to prepare well-characterized initial surfaces, and have utilized both ns and fs laser sources to drive the photochemistry. He is currently active in the area of optical characterization of thin films and interfaces, specifically in the development of second-order nonlinear-optical techniques (second harmonic generation, SHG, and sum frequency generation, SFG) for the study of both carrier dynamics at buried interfaces (via electronically resonant SHG) and in situ molecular dynamics (via vibrationally resonant SFG).

Selected Publications

Contact-induced crystallinity for high-performance soluble acene-based transistors and circuits

Author(s)
David J. Gundlach, James E. Royer, SK Park, Sankar Subramanian, Oana Jurchescu, Behrang H. Hamadani, Andrew Moad, Regis J. Kline, LC Teague, Oleg A. Kirillov, Curt A. Richter, Lee J. Richter, Sean R. Parkin, Thomas Jackson, JE Anthony
The use of organic materials presents a tremendous opportunity to significantly impact the functionality and pervasiveness of large-area electronics

Publications

Charge-state dependent ion condensation near conjugated polymer backbones

Author(s)
Dilara Meli, Quentin Thomas, Guillaume Freychet, Lucas Flagg, Iain McCulloch, David Beljonne, Lee Richter, Jonathan Rivnay
Despite the technological appeal of organic mixed ionic/electronic conductors (OMIECs) for a range of applications, a deep understanding of the fundamentals of

The Role of Side Chains and Hydration on Mixed Charge Transport in n-type Polymer Films

Author(s)
Lucas Flagg, Lee Richter, Jokubas Surgailis, Victor Druet, Sophie Griggs, Xiaocui Wu, Stefania Moro, David Ohayon, Christina Kousseff, Adam Marks, Iuliana Petruta Maria, Hu Chen, Maximilian Moser, Giovanni Costantini, Iain McCulloch, Sahika inal
Introducing polar ethylene glycol (EG) side chains to a conjugated polymer backbone is a well-established synthetic strategy to design organic mixed ion

Data and Software Publications

Created October 9, 2019, Updated December 8, 2022
Was this page helpful?