Aktuelles / Presseinformationen

COMEDD´s director Prof. Karl Leo wins Rudolf-Jaeckel-Prize of the German Vacuum Society

Dresden, 20th of June 2012; Professor Karl Leo, director of Fraunhofer COMEDD (Center for Organic Materials and Electronic Devices Dresden) and the Institute of Applied Photophysics at the Technical University Dresden, has been awarded with the Rudolf-Jaeckel-Prize 2012 within the Annual Conference of the German Vacuum Society (DVG). This year the conference took place from 4th to 8th of June 2012 in connection with the 14th Joint Vacuum Conference and the 12th European Vacuum Conference in Dubrovnik. 

Prof. Leo has been honored because of his pioneering research work in physics of organic semiconductors and its application in optoelectronics particularly for Organic Light-Emitting Diodes (OLED) and large area organic solar cells. Prof. Leo sees the prize as a further stimulation for the research activities at the TU Dresden and the further transfer of them into practice at the Fraunhofer COMEDD: “I am deeply grateful for this award. It is another recognition of the work of my colleagues and me on pioneering organic technologies for fascinating applications such as displays, novel lighting, and flexible solar cells.”

Furthermore OLEDs also can be integrated into microchips for the use as microdisplays in data eyeglasses or as integrated light source in sensor solutions.

The Rudolf-Jaeckel-Prize is awarded annually for outstanding achievements in the field of vacuum based sciences.

About Prof. Karl Leo:

Karl Leo obtained the Diplomphysiker degree from the University of Freiburg in 1985, working with Adolf Goetzberger at the Fraunhofer-Institut für Solare Energiesysteme. In 1988, he obtained the PhD degree from the University of Stuttgart for a PhD thesis performed at the Max-Planck-Institut für Festkörperforschung in Stuttgart under supervision of Hans Queisser. From 1989 to 1991, he was postdoc at AT&T Bell Laboratories in Holmdel, NJ, U.S.A. From 1991 to 1993, he was with the Rheinisch-Westfälische Technische Hochschule (RWTH) in Aachen, Germany.

Since 1993, he is full professor of optoelectronics at the Technische Universität Dresden, since 2002, he is also working at the Fraunhofer-Institute for Photonic Microsystems, presently as director. Hismain interests are novel semiconductor systems like semiconducting organic thin films; with special emphasis to understand basics device principles and the optical response. His work was recognized by the following awards: Otto-Hahn-Medaille (1989), Bennigsen-Förder-Preis (1991), Leibniz-Award (2002), award of the Berlin-Brandenburg Academy (2002), Manfred-von-Ardenne-Preis (2006) and Zukunftspreis of the German president (2011). He is cofounder of several companies, including Novaled AG and Heliatek GmbH.

About the Rudolf-Jaeckel-Prize:

The DVG annually awards the Rudolf-Jaeckel prize for outstanding achievements in the field of vacuum based sciences. It mainly honours pioneering and long standing work in the field of vacuum based sciences and their application and implementation both in the scientific and industrial praxis. Also outstanding achievements for a more recent topic may be honoured. The prize may be given either to a single person (no age limit) or a team. The laureates should originate from the German speaking countries, exceptions are possible.

The prize consists of a cheque of 1000 Euro, a medal and a certificate.

The laureate is chosen by a committee of 5 persons elected by the DVG advisory board.

The chairman of the DVG-committee, Prof. (em.) Dr. Hans Oechsner emphasizes, that the decision about the awarding of Prof. Leo has been made on November 30th, 2011 – before the awarding of the “Deutsche Zunkunftspreis”. 

www.vakuumgesellschaft.de

About COMEDD:

In recent years Dresden has evolved into a research center for organic materials and systems. In order to transfer the results to production further improvements in the production process and the establishment as well as the testing of first pilot-production lines are necessary. The Center of Organic Materials and Electronic Devices Dresden (COMEDD) – meanwhile an independent branch of the Fraunhofer IPMS - combines research and development works for the production, integration and technology of organic devices. The focus of COMEDD lies in customer- and application orientated research, development and pilot fabrication of novel module concepts and fabrication
methods for these organic materials. COMEDD is a European-wide leading production-related research and development center for organic semiconductors focusing on organic light-emitting diodes and vacuum technology.

The COMEDD clean room consists of the following equipment:

  • a pilot line for the fabrication of OLEDs on 370 x 470 mm² substrates,
  • two pilot lines for 200 mm wafer for the OLED integration on CMOS substrates as well as
  • a research line for the roll-to-roll fabrication on flexible substrates.
COMEDD offers a wide range of research, development and pilot production possibilities, especially for OLED lighting, organic solar cells and OLED microdisplays.


The laureate of the Rudolf-Jaeckel-Prize 2012 Prof. Dr. Leo (middle) together with Prof. Kopnarski, Prof. Heuken, Prof. (em.) Dr. Oechsner, Prof. Dr. Radic, Zagreb, (chairman of the conference)
Reference: „ECM 12- IVC 14“


OLED lighting panels

Information for journalists:

Prof. Karl Leo
Institut für Angewandte Photophysik at the TU Dresden
Tel.: +49 (0)351 463-37533; -34389
Internet: www.iapp.de Further information are available:

Fraunhofer IPMS COMEDD
Ines SchedwillTel.: +49 (0) 351/8823-238
Head of MarketingFax: +49 (0) 351/8823-266
Maria-Reiche-Str. 2e-mail: Ines.Schedwill@ipms.fraunhofer.de
01109 DresdenInternet: www.ipms.fraunhofer.de
GERMANY


 

< < zurück