Morphology, Charge Transport Properties, and Molecular Doping of Thiophene-based Organic Semiconducting Thin Films

Morphology, Charge Transport Properties, and Molecular Doping of Thiophene-based Organic Semiconducting Thin Films

Author: Patrick Pingel

Publisher:

Published: 2013

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Organic semiconductors combine the benefits of organic materials, i.e., low-cost production, mechanical flexibility, lightweight, and robustness, with the fundamental semiconductor properties light absorption, emission, and electrical conductivity. This class of material has several advantages over conventional inorganic semiconductors that have led, for instance, to the commercialization of organic light-emitting diodes which can nowadays be found in the displays of TVs and smartphones. Moreover, organic semiconductors will possibly lead to new electronic applications which rely on the unique mechanical and electrical properties of these materials. In order to push the development and the success of organic semiconductors forward, it is essential to understand the fundamental processes in these materials. This thesis concentrates on understanding how the charge transport in thiophene-based semiconductor layers depends on the layer morphology and how the charge transport properties can be intentionally modified by doping these layers with a strong electron acceptor. By means of optical spectroscopy, the layer morphologies of poly(3-hexylthiophene), P3HT, P3HT-fullerene bulk heterojunction blends, and oligomeric polyquaterthiophene, oligo-PQT-12, are studied as a function of temperature, molecular weight, and processing conditions. The analyses rely on the decomposition of the absorption contributions from the ordered and the disordered parts of the layers. The ordered-phase spectra are analyzed using Spano's model. It is figured out that the fraction of aggregated chains and the interconnectivity of these domains is fundamental to a high charge carrier mobility. In P3HT layers, such structures can be grown with high-molecular weight, long P3HT chains. Low and medium molecular weight P3HT layers do also contain a significant amount of chain aggregates with high intragrain mobility; however, intergranular connectivity and, therefore, efficient macroscopic charge transport are absent. In P3HT-fullerene blend layers, a highly crystalline morphology that favors the hole transport and the solar cell efficiency can be induced by annealing procedures and the choice of a high-boiling point processing solvent. Based on scanning near-field and polarization optical microscopy, the morphology of oligo-PQT-12 layers is found to be highly crystalline which explains the rather high field-effect mobility in this material as compared to low molecular weight polythiophene fractions. On the other hand, crystalline dislocations and grain boundaries are identified which clearly limit the charge carrier mobility in oligo-PQT-12 layers. The charge transport properties of organic semiconductors can be widely tuned by molecular doping. Indeed, molecular doping is a key to highly efficient organic light-emitting diodes and solar cells. Despite this vital role, it is still not understood how mobile charge carriers are induced into the bulk semiconductor upon the doping process. This thesis contains a detailed study of the doping mechanism and the electrical properties of P3HT layers which have been p-doped by the strong molecular acceptor tetrafluorotetracyanoquinodimethane, F4TCNQ. The density of doping-induced mobile holes, their mobility, and the electrical conductivity are characterized in a broad range of acceptor concentrations. A long-standing debate on the nature of the charge transfer between P3HT and F4TCNQ is resolved by showing that almost every F4TCNQ acceptor undergoes a full-electron charge transfer with a P3HT site. However, only 5% of these charge transfer pairs can dissociate and induce a mobile hole into P3HT which contributes electrical conduction. Moreover, it is shown that the left-behind F4TCNQ ions broaden the density-of-states distribution for the doping-induced mobile holes, which is due to the longrange Coulomb attraction in the low-permittivity organic semiconductors.


Handbook of Thiophene-Based Materials

Handbook of Thiophene-Based Materials

Author: Igor F. Perepichka

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2009-07-17

Total Pages: 910

ISBN-13: 9780470745540

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This essential resource consists of a series of critical reviews written by leading scientists, summarising the progress in the field of conjugated thiophene materials. It is an application-oriented book, giving a chemists’ point of view on the state-of-art and perspectives of the field. While presenting a comprehensive coverage of thiophene-based materials and related applications, the aim is to show how the rational molecular design of materials can bring a new breadth to known device applications or even aid the development of novel application concepts. The main topics covered include synthetic methodologies to thiophene-based materials (including the chemistry of thiophene, preparation of oligomers and polymerisation approaches) and the structure and physical properties of oligo- and polythiophenes (discussion of structural effects on electronic and optical properties). Part of the book is devoted to the optical and semiconducting properties of conjugated thiophene materials for electronics and photonics, and the role of thiophene-based materials in nanotechnology.


Doping and Density of States Engineering for Organic Thermoelectrics

Doping and Density of States Engineering for Organic Thermoelectrics

Author: Guangzheng Zuo

Publisher: Linköping University Electronic Press

Published: 2018-05-14

Total Pages: 67

ISBN-13: 917685311X

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Thermoelectric materials can turn temperature differences directly into electricity. To use this to harvest e.g. waste heat with an efficiency that approaches the Carnot efficiency requires a figure of merit ZT larger than 1. Compared with their inorganic counterparts, organic thermoelectrics (OTE) have numerous advantages, such as low cost, large-area compatibility, flexibility, material abundance and an inherently low thermal conductivity. Therefore, organic thermoelectrics are considered by many to be a promising candidate material system to be used in lower cost and higher efficiency thermoelectric energy conversion, despite record ZT values for OTE currently lying around 0.25. A complete organic thermoelectric generator (TEG) normally needs both p-type and n-type materials to form its electric circuit. Molecular doping is an effective way to achieve p- and ntype materials using different dopants, and it is necessary to fundamentally understand the doping mechanism. We developed a simple yet quantitative analytical model and compare it with numerical kinetic Monte Carlo simulations to reveal the nature of the doping effect. The results show the formation of a deep tail in the Gaussian density of states (DOS) resulting from the Coulomb potentials of ionized dopants. It is this deep trap tail that negatively influences the charge carrier mobility with increasing doping concentration. The trends in mobilities and conductivities observed from experiments are in good agreement with the modeling results, for a large range of materials and doping concentrations. Having a high power factor PF is necessary for efficient TEG. We demonstrate that the doping method can heavily impact the thermoelectric properties of OTE. In comparison to conventional bulk doping, sequential doping can achieve higher conductivity by preserving the morphology, such that the power factor can improve over 100 times. To achieve TEG with high output power, not only a high PF is needed, but also having a significant active layer thickness is very important. We demonstrate a simple way to fabricate multi-layer devices by sequential doping without significantly sacrificing PF. In addition to the application discussed above, harvesting large amounts of heat at maximum efficiency, organic thermoelectrics may also find use in low-power applications like autonomous sensors where voltage is more important than power. A large output voltage requires a high Seebeck coefficient. We demonstrate that density of states (DOS) engineering is an effective tool to increase the Seebeck coefficient by tailoring the positions of the Fermi energy and the transport energy in n- and p-type doped blends of conjugated polymers and small molecules. In general, morphology heavily impacts the performance of organic electronic devices based on mixtures of two (or more) materials, and organic thermoelectrics are no exception. We experimentally find that the charge and energy transport is distinctly different in well-mixed and phase separated morphologies, which we interpreted in terms of a variable range hopping model. The experimentally observed trends in conductivity and Seebeck coefficient are reproduced by kinetic Monte Carlo simulations in which the morphology is accounted for.


Semiconducting Polymers

Semiconducting Polymers

Author: Georges Hadziioannou

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2006-12-15

Total Pages: 786

ISBN-13: 3527312714

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The field of semiconducting polymers has attracted many researchers from a diversity of disciplines. Printed circuitry, flexible electronics and displays are already migrating from laboratory successes to commercial applications, but even now fundamental knowledge is deficient concerning some of the basic phenomena that so markedly influence a device's usefulness and competitiveness. This two-volume handbook describes the various approaches to doped and undoped semiconducting polymers taken with the aim to provide vital understanding of how to control the properties of these fascinating organic materials. Prominent researchers from the fields of synthetic chemistry, physical chemistry, engineering, computational chemistry, theoretical physics, and applied physics cover all aspects from compounds to devices. Since the first edition was published in 2000, significant findings and successes have been achieved in the field, and especially handheld electronic gadgets have become billion-dollar markets that promise a fertile application ground for flexible, lighter and disposable alternatives to classic silicon circuitry. The second edition brings readers up-to-date on cutting edge research in this field.


Correlation between Structural and Electronic Properties of Co-Evaporated Doped Organic Thin Films

Correlation between Structural and Electronic Properties of Co-Evaporated Doped Organic Thin Films

Author: Daniela Donhauser

Publisher: Cuvillier Verlag

Published: 2014-10-23

Total Pages: 166

ISBN-13: 3736948301

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Devices based on organic semiconductors, like organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) or organic solar cells, often comprise electrochemically doped charge transport layers, which improve the performance of these devices. Although very efficient devices can be realized nowadays, a comprehensive description of the physical processes taking place in electrochemically doped thin films is still missing. For instance, it was shown for a variety of different material systems that the doping efficiency, defined as the number of free charge carriers compared to the number of incorporated dopants, often amounts to only a few per cent. The organic semiconductor CBP (4,4’-Bis(N-carbazolyl)-1,1’-biphenyl), doped with the transition metal oxide molybdenum oxide (MoO3), is used here as a model system to investigate the origin for this low doping efficiency. Results from different measurement techniques, like electron tomography, EF-TEM, PES, FTIR-spectroscopy and (temperature- dependent) electrical measurements were correlated to get insight into the origin of the low doping effiencies and to obtain a model to describe charge transport in MoO3-doped CBP films as a function of the doping concentration.


Organic Thermoelectric Materials

Organic Thermoelectric Materials

Author: Zhiqun Lin

Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry

Published: 2019-10-18

Total Pages: 330

ISBN-13: 1788014707

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This book summarises the significant progress made in organic thermoelectric materials, focusing on effective routes to minimize thermal conductivity and maximize power factor.


Semiconducting Polymers

Semiconducting Polymers

Author: Christine Luscombe

Publisher: Royal Society of Chemistry

Published: 2016-10-12

Total Pages: 293

ISBN-13: 1782624007

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Semiconducting polymers are of great interest for applications in electroluminescent devices, solar cells, batteries and diodes. In recent years vast advances have been made in the area of controlled synthesis of semiconducting polymers, specifically polythiophenes. The book is separated into two main sections, the first will introduce the advances made in polymer synthesis, and the second will focus on the microstructure and property analysis that has been enabled because of the recent advances in synthetic strategies. Edited by one of the leaders in the area of polythiophene synthesis, this new book will bring the field up to date with more recent models for understanding semiconducting polymers. The book will be applicable to materials and polymers chemists in industry and academia from postgraduate level upwards.


Doping Of Semiconducting Polymers For Electronic Applications

Doping Of Semiconducting Polymers For Electronic Applications

Author: David Jones

Publisher:

Published: 2014

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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One branch of modern electronics requires avoiding the high processing costs associated with inorganic semiconductors in order to create novel low-cost, mechanically flexible, and low-profile devices for the next generation of consumer devices. Organic semiconductors can be doped to improve their charge mobility and carrier density towards creating better polymer-based photovoltaics, organic thin-film transistors, and organic light-emitting diodes. Dopants offer one route to improved device performance, but the specific interactions between the dopant molecule and the semiconductor must be designed for the desired function.This work explores the effects of sulfonic acid groups on the behavior of the common organic semiconductor poly-(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT). P3HT was chosen for its ubiquitous use in photovoltaics and other organic electronic applications. The doping of P3HT by sulfonic acid-containing moieties was explored initially as a method to replace the poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene): polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS) electron blocking later at the photovoltaic transparent indium tin oxide electrode. Measurements of doped thiophene-based polymers were conducted in organic thin-film transistor geometries to measure the charge carrier densities. Additionally, spectroscopic evidence of doping complemented the transistor and photovoltaic studies. This work explores the extent to which P3HT can be doped at the highest density and how it may be used in modern organic electronics such as transistors, photovoltaics, and light-emitting diodes.