05488nam 2200697 450 991013229480332120200520144314.03-527-67999-53-527-67997-93-527-68000-4(CKB)3710000000335527(EBL)1896072(SSID)ssj0001433971(PQKBManifestationID)11897902(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001433971(PQKBWorkID)11416572(PQKB)10829931(MiAaPQ)EBC1896072(MiAaPQ)EBC4044575(Au-PeEL)EBL1896072(CaPaEBR)ebr11006384(CaONFJC)MIL695400(OCoLC)900343746(PPN)270698957(EXLCZ)99371000000033552720150127h20152015 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrLarge area and flexible electronics /edited by Mario Caironi and Yong-Young Noh ; contributors, Jong-Hyun Ahn [and forty seven others]2nd ed.Weinheim, Germany :Wiley-VCH,2015.©20151 online resource (588 p.)Description based upon print version of record.3-527-33639-7 Includes bibliographical references at the end of each chapters and index.Large Area and Flexible Electronics; Contents; List of Contributors; Overview; Book Structure and Aim; Acknowledgments; References; Part I: Materials; Chapter 1 Polymeric and Small-Molecule Semiconductors for Organic Field-Effect Transistors; 1.1 Introduction; 1.2 Organic Semiconductor Structural Design; 1.3 Thin-Film Transistor Applications; 1.4 p-Channel Semiconductors; 1.4.1 Polymers; 1.4.2 Small Molecules; 1.5 n-Channel Semiconductors; 1.5.1 Polymers; 1.5.2 Small Molecules; 1.6 Ambipolar Semiconductors; 1.6.1 Polymers; 1.6.2 Small Molecules; 1.7 Conclusions; ReferencesChapter 2 Metal-Oxide Thin-Film Transistors for Flexible Electronics2.1 Introduction; 2.2 Metal-Oxide TFTs; 2.2.1 Advantages and Applications; 2.2.2 Vacuum Deposition; 2.2.3 Solution Processing; 2.3 Solution-Processed MO Thin Films; 2.3.1 Nanoparticle-Based Process; 2.3.2 Sol-Gel-Based Process; 2.3.3 Hybrid Type; 2.4 Low-Temperature-Processed MO TFTs for Flexible Electronics; 2.4.1 Low-Temperature-Processed MO TFTs; 2.4.1.1 Annealing Environment; 2.4.1.2 Ink Formulation; 2.4.1.3 Alternate Annealing Process; 2.4.2 Photochemical Activation of Oxide Semiconductors; 2.5 Summary; ReferencesChapter 3 Carbon Nanotube Thin-Film Transistors3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Individual SWCNTs and SWCNT Thin Films; 3.3 Chemical Vapor Deposition Growth of SWCNT TFTs; 3.4 Solution-Based Methods for SWCNT TFTs; 3.5 Inkjet Printing of Flexible SWCNT TFTs; 3.6 Fabrication Schemes for High-Performance Inkjet-Printed SWCNT TFTs; 3.7 Inkjet Printing of SWCNT CMOS Inverters; 3.8 Inkjet Printing of Aligned SWCNT Films; 3.9 Conclusion; References; Chapter 4 Organic Single-Crystalline Semiconductors for Flexible Electronics Applications; 4.1 Introduction4.2 Electronic and Structural Properties of Single Crystals4.2.1 Intrinsic Transport Properties; 4.2.2 Crystal Dimensionality; 4.3 Crystallization Techniques; 4.3.1 Growth from Vapor Phase; 4.3.2 Growth from Solution; 4.4 Single-Crystal Flexible Electronic Devices; 4.4.1 Fundamental Mechanics for Flexible Electronics; 4.4.2 Mechanical Versatility of Organic Single Crystals; 4.4.3 Importance of Mechanical Properties Knowledge; 4.4.4 The Elastic Constants of Rubrene Single Crystals; 4.5 Strategies for Flexible Organic Single-Crystal Device Fabrication4.5.1 Discrete Ultrathin Single-Crystal Transistor4.5.2 Transistor Arrays Based on Micropatterned Single Crystals; 4.5.3 Flexible Single-Crystal Nanowire Devices; 4.6 Conclusions; Acknowledgments; References; Chapter 5 Solution-Processable Quantum Dots; 5.1 Introduction; 5.2 Optimization of the Colloidal Synthesis of Quantum Dots by Selection of Suitable Solvents, Ligands, and Precursors; 5.3 Large-Scale Synthesis of Quantum Dots; 5.4 Surface Chemistry of Quantum Dots; 5.5 Post-Synthetic Chemical Modification of Nanocrystals; 5.6 Conclusions and Outlook; ReferencesChapter 6 Inorganic Semiconductor Nanomaterials for Flexible ElectronicsFrom materials to applications, this ready reference covers the entire value chain from fundamentals via processing right up to devices, presenting different approaches to large-area electronics, thus enabling readers to compare materials, properties and performance.Divided into two parts, the first focuses on the materials used for the electronic functionality, covering organic and inorganic semiconductors, including vacuum and solution-processed metal-oxide semiconductors, nanomembranes and nanocrystals, as well as conductors and insulators. The second part reviews the devices and applicatioElectronicsMaterialsFlexible printed circuitsElectronicsMaterials.Flexible printed circuits.621.381028Caironi MarioNoh Yong-YoungAhn Jong-HyunMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910132294803321Large area and flexible electronics1976146UNINA05297oam 2200685I 450 991096962050332120251116195843.01-317-79277-71-317-79276-91-315-81051-410.4324/9781315810515 (CKB)3710000000072643(EBL)1574844(SSID)ssj0001152562(PQKBManifestationID)11590963(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001152562(PQKBWorkID)11147314(PQKB)11264158(MiAaPQ)EBC1574844(Au-PeEL)EBL1574844(CaPaEBR)ebr10813716(CaONFJC)MIL762365(OCoLC)869092012(OCoLC)865813316(FINmELB)ELB137391(EXLCZ)99371000000007264320180706d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrAncient Egyptian literature /by Adolf Erman1st ed.London ;New York :Routledge,2009.1 online resource (583 p.)"Originally published in 1927 by Methuen"--T.p. verso.0-415-64582-4 0-7103-0964-3 Includes bibliographical references.Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Translator's Preface; Author's Preface; Table of Contents; Outline of Egyptian History; By Way of Introduction-; 1. The Development of the Literature; 2. The Learned Scribes; 3. Singers and Story-Tellers; 4. The Forms of the Poetry; 5. Writing and Books; 6. Our Understanding of Egyptian Texts; I. From the Oldest Poetry; 1. From the Pyramid Texts-; (a) The deceased's journey to the sky; (b) The same; (c) The same; (d) The same; (e) The same; (f) The deceased conquers the sky; (g) The deceased devours the gods(h) To a constellation, which is to announce the arrival of the deceased in the sky(i) The deceased comes as messenger to Osiris; (k) The goddesses suckle the deceased; (l) The fate of the enemies of the deceased; (m) Joy over the inundation; 2. To the Crowns-; (a) To the crown of Lower Egypt; (b) To the crown of Upper Egypt; (c) The same; 3. Morning Hymns-; (a) To the sun-god; (b) To the royal serpent; II. From the Older Period; A. Narratives-; 1. The Story of Sinuhe; 2. The Story of the Shipwrecked Sailor; 3. The Story of the Herdsman; 4. King Kheops and the Magicians5. The Deliverance of Mankind6. The Founding of a Temple; 7. The War of King Kamōse; B. Instructions in Wisdom-; 1. The Instruction of Ptahhotep; 2. The Instruction for Kagemni; 3. The Instruction of Duauf; 4. The Instruction of King Amenemhēt; 5. The Instruction for King Merikerē; 6. The Instruction of Sehetepibrē; C. Meditations and Complaints-; 1. The Dispute with his Soul of one who is tired of Life; 2. The Admonitions of a Prophet; 3. The Complaint of Khekheperre-sonbu; 4. The Prophecy of Neferrohu; 5. The Complaints of the Peasant; D. Secular Poems-; 1. Songs of the workers-Song of the shepherdsSong of the fishers; Song of the chairmen; 2. Songs at Banquets; 3. Hymns to King Sesōstris III; E. Religious Poems-; 1. To Min-Horus; 2. To the sun-; (a) To the morning sun; (b) To the evening sun; 3. To Thōth; 4. Hymns to Osiris-; (a) The long hymn; (b) Shorter hymns; 5. To the Nile; III. From the New Kingdom; A. Narratives-; 1. The Tale of the Two Brothers; 2. The Enchanted Prince; 3. King Apōphis and Sekenenrē; 4. The Capture of Joppa; 5. Concerning Astarte; 6. A Ghost Story; 7. Concerning a King and a Goddess; 8. The Quarrel of the Body and the Head9. The Voyage of UnamūnB. The Schools and their Writings-; 1. Exhortations and Warnings to Schoolboys-; Life at School; Be diligent; The same; The same; Beer and the maiden; The schoolboy is put in fetters; Be diligent; Do not be an husbandman; Do not be a soldier; Do not be a Soldier; The same; Do not be a charioteer; Do not be a soldier, a priest, or a baker; Be an official; A fragment; 2. Actual Letters as Models for Schoolboys-; Pursuit of a runaway slave; Order to carry out a piece of work; Business of various sorts; Request for assistance in a matter of taxation; EnquiriesFamily letterThis book is an impressive collection of some of the earliest literature still extant from the great Ancient Egyptian civilization. Much of the material contained in this work -- poems, narratives, songs and prayers -- was translated here and made accessible to lovers of antiquity for the first time. Covering a range of topics including schools, religion and love, the collected works here provide the reader with a deeper understanding of ancient life along the Nile.Egyptian literatureTranslations into EnglishEgyptian literatureTranslations into English.893.1/08893.108Erman Adolf1854-1937.,177651Blackman Aylward M(Aylward Manley),1883-1956.1169576MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910969620503321Ancient Egyptian literature4494502UNINA