The Organic Electronics program at Wake Forest University consists of exciting and interdisciplinary topics of research, and provides opportunities for both undergraduate and graduate involvement. Given the experimental work that we carry on, as well as the impact of the field on the industry and science, the research performed in the Organic Electronics group offers an excellent environment to develop skills for becoming competitive researchers in industry or academia.
We look for motivated and enthusiastic undergraduate and graduate students to join our group. Specific research projects will be tailored to each student’s interests, experience and background. Given the interdisciplinary nature of this research, students from departments other than Physics may also apply.
The selected applicant will join our team to investigate fundamental and applied aspects charge injection and transport in organic electronic devices.
Undergraduate students
- undergraduate research courses (PHY 381 and PHY 382) – during academic year
- research fellowships: - paid research projects during summer:
Graduate students
The first step in becoming a Master or PhD student in Organic Electronics Group at Wake Forest University is to be accepted by the department (application deadline - January 15th for the Fall semester and November 1st for the Spring semester.).When becoming part of the Organic Electronics team, the students will work in an area of research with large technological interest for displays, memory applications, sensors, etc., and will become familiar with state-of-the-art semiconductor processing and characterization technologies. For more details, please visit the Research page of the group.
Research credit hours for graduate students:
- Thesis research credit hours (PHY 791 and PHY 792)
- Dissertation research credit hours (PHY 891 and PHY 892)
