(under the class definition) Process for making a semiconductor electrical device wherein the semiconductor substrate contains a semiconductive compound in which the molecule is characterized by two or more carbon atoms bonded together, one atom of carbon bonded to at least one atom of hydrogen or halogen (i.e., chlorine, fluorine, bromine, iodine) or one atom of carbon bonded to at least one atom of nitrogen by a single or double bond.
(1) Note. Exceptions to this rule include HCN, CN-CN, HNCO, HNCS, cyanogen halides, cyanamide, fulminic acid, and metal carbides. These are not regarded as organic materials. Also, note that graphite and diamond are not regarded as organic semiconductors, since they are not compounds; silicon carbide is not regarded as organic.
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82, for a process of making a device having an organic semiconductive component which is responsive to electromagnetic radiation.
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29, Metal Working,
25.03, for a process of making an electrolytic capacitor using a solid organic semiconductor. 136, Batteries: Thermoelectric and Photoelectric,
263, for photoelectric cells containing organic active material.
252, Compositions,
62.3, for organic barrier layer device compositions.
257, Active Solid-State Devices (e.g., Transistors, Solid-State Diodes),
40, for an active solid-state device having an organic semiconductor.