Self-Organized Organic Semiconductors

Self-Organized Organic Semiconductors

Author: Quan Li

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2011-03-03

Total Pages: 376

ISBN-13: 1118009045

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This book focuses on the exciting topic on self-organized organic semiconductors – from materials to device applications. It offers up-to-date and accessible coverage of self-organized semiconductors for organic chemistry, polymer science, liquid crystals, materials science, material engineering, electrical engineering, chemical engineering, optics, optic-electronics, nanotechnology and semiconductors. Chapters cover chemistry, physics, processing, and characterization. The applications include photovoltaics, light-emitting diodes (LEDs), and transistors.


Self-Organized Organic Semiconductors

Self-Organized Organic Semiconductors

Author: Quan Li

Publisher: Wiley

Published: 2011-04-26

Total Pages: 320

ISBN-13: 9780470559734

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This book focuses on the exciting topic on self-organized organic semiconductors – from materials to device applications. It offers up-to-date and accessible coverage of self-organized semiconductors for organic chemistry, polymer science, liquid crystals, materials science, material engineering, electrical engineering, chemical engineering, optics, optic-electronics, nanotechnology and semiconductors. Chapters cover chemistry, physics, processing, and characterization. The applications include photovoltaics, light-emitting diodes (LEDs), and transistors.


Electronic Processes in Organic Semiconductors

Electronic Processes in Organic Semiconductors

Author: Anna Köhler

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2015-06-08

Total Pages: 436

ISBN-13: 3527332928

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The first advanced textbook to provide a useful introduction in a brief, coherent and comprehensive way, with a focus on the fundamentals. After having read this book, students will be prepared to understand any of the many multi-authored books available in this field that discuss a particular aspect in more detail, and should also benefit from any of the textbooks in photochemistry or spectroscopy that concentrate on a particular mechanism. Based on a successful and well-proven lecture course given by one of the authors for many years, the book is clearly structured into four sections: electronic structure of organic semiconductors, charged and excited states in organic semiconductors, electronic and optical properties of organic semiconductors, and fundamentals of organic semiconductor devices.


Self-organization of Organic Molecules

Self-organization of Organic Molecules

Author: Jacob Martin

Publisher:

Published: 2022

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Organic semiconductors have advantages over their inorganic counterparts including low cost, flexibility, and eco-friendliness. While organic semiconductors have interesting uses in devices such as solar cells, photovoltaic cells, and even flexible electronics, they are not competitive with inorganics due to their lower conductivity. One reason for this lower conductivity is due to their amorphous structure, making it difficult for electrons to tunnel from one adjacent molecule to the next. A possible method to increase the conductivity of organic semiconductors is crystallization via self-assembly. This work computationally examines the self-organization of an organic semiconductor, pentacene, on a simple and structurally similar surface, graphene. Ab initio calculations were used to determine the ground-state energy of a single pentacene molecule on a graphene sheet at various orientations, where the pentacene molecule is incrementally translated in the x and y directions at multiple angles. These energies are used to create potential energy maps of the system relative to the minima. This allows us to predict how pentacene organizes on graphene due to molecule-substrate interactions. The results in this study identify multiple configurations with relative energies less than that of room temperature, 27.8% of all considered. Additionally, 7.8% have a relative energy within 12.5 meV. Room temperature, 25 meV, is used as a comparative value to show how close (or far away) energy configurations are to each other. However, as it is more difficult for a molecule to thermally diffuse across a surface as all atoms would need to move in a uniform manner, a smaller energy range (12.5 meV) is also evaluated. These results demonstrate a need for an additional driving force (i.e., molecule-molecule interactions) for the self-organization of pentacene on graphene and provides a more complete understanding of the pentacene-graphene system.


Molecular Spintronics

Molecular Spintronics

Author: Marta Galbiati

Publisher: Springer

Published: 2015-10-15

Total Pages: 191

ISBN-13: 3319226118

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This thesis targets molecular or organic spintronics and more particularly the spin polarization tailoring opportunities that arise from the ferromagnetic metal/molecule hybridization at interfaces: the new concept of spinterface. Molecular or organic spintronics is an emerging research field at the frontier between organic chemistry and spintronics. The manuscript is divided into three parts, the first of which introduces the basic concepts of spintronics and advantages that molecules can bring to this field. The state of the art on organic and molecular spintronics is also presented, with a special emphasis on the physics and experimental evidence for spinterfaces. The book’s second and third parts are dedicated to the two main experimental topics investigated in the thesis: Self-Assembled Monolayers (SAMs) and Organic Semiconductors (OSCs). The study of SAMs-based magnetic tunnel nanojunctions reveals the potential to modulate the properties of such devices “at will,” since each part of the molecule can be tuned independently like a “LEGO” building block. The study of Alq3-based spin valves reveals magnetoresistance effects at room temperature and is aimed at understanding the respective roles played by the two interfaces. Through the development of these systems, we demonstrate their potential for spintronics and provide a solid foundation for spin polarization engineering at the molecular level.


Investigating the Nucleation, Growth, and Energy Levels of Organic Semiconductors for High Performance Plastic Electronics

Investigating the Nucleation, Growth, and Energy Levels of Organic Semiconductors for High Performance Plastic Electronics

Author: Ajay Virkar

Publisher: Springer Science & Business Media

Published: 2011-09-29

Total Pages: 141

ISBN-13: 1441997040

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This thesis details the significant progress made in improving the performance of organic transistors and the network conductivity of carbon nanotubes. The first section investigates organic semiconductor nucleation and growth on the most common dielectric surface used to fabricate organic thin film transistors. The nucleation and growth of the semiconductor was determined to be a critical factor affecting the device performance. Excellent dielectric modification layers, which promote desirable semiconductor growth leading to high conductivity were identified, and a technologically relevant deposition technique was developed to fabricate high quality dielectric modification layers over large areas. This may represent an important step towards the realization of large area organic circuity. In the final section, lessons learned from studying organic semiconductor nucleation and growth were utilized to improve the conductivity of carbon nanotube networks. Selective nucleation of materials at the junctions between nanotubes in the network significantly decreased the network's sheet resistance. The resulting networks may be promising candidates for transparent electrodes with a variety of optoelectronic applications.


Self-Assembled Organic Semiconductor Quantum Boxes and Wires from Block Copolymers

Self-Assembled Organic Semiconductor Quantum Boxes and Wires from Block Copolymers

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1998

Total Pages: 0

ISBN-13:

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Low dimensional organic semiconductors such as quantum boxes, quantum wires, or superlattices are predicted to exhibit enhanced or novel electronic and optical properties for applications in solid state electronic and optoelectronic devices in ways similar to low dimensional inorganic semiconductors. However, the relatively small charge carrier and excition Bohr radii of organic semiconductors (ca. 1.0-1.5 nm) has heretofore made it difficult to prepare organic semiconductor heterostructures with quantum confinement effects. Ultrasmall semiconducting polymer quantum boxes and wires with confinement volumes of 1-2 nm3 have been prepared in our laboratory by self-organization of blends of ABA block conjugated copolymers with a parent homopolymer. Observation of new optical transitions, enhanced luminescence, and stability of luminescence at high electric fields confirmed the confinement of excitons in the organic quantum boxes and wires.


Organic Semiconductor Interfaces with Insulators and Metals

Organic Semiconductor Interfaces with Insulators and Metals

Author: Kathrin Müller

Publisher: Cuvillier Verlag

Published: 2009-10-12

Total Pages: 110

ISBN-13: 3736931182

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The electronic interactions of self-assembled organic semiconductors with metals, metal-oxides and ultrathin insulator surfaces have been investigated by complementary analysis techniques comprising scanning tunnelling microscopy and spectroscopy, low energy electron diffraction, x-ray photoelectron spectroscopy and ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy. Two model systems have been chosen and investigated: The first model system comprises the electronic interactions and the self-assembly of pentacene molecules on the Cu(110) as well as on the oxidized Cu(110) surface. In a second model system the interface of octa-ethyl porphyrins with ultrathin insulator films and metals has been investigated. The adsorption of molecules on insulator surfaces is especially interesting due to the strong reduction of the electronic and chemical interactions between the molecules and the substrate. The investigation of pentacene on the Cu(110) surface revealed a multi-phase behaviour, which is characterized by molecular bending, molecular mobility, different relative orientation of the molecules and different packing densities. Furthermore, the influence of the adsorbate layer on the Shockley surface state of the Cu(110) has been investigated. A complex interplay of different phenomena, like Pauli repulsion, charge transfer, mixing and hybridization of electronic states as well as the polarization of the organic adsorbate in the surface dipolar field, lead to a shift of the surface state to higher binding energies. Additionally, the occupation of the surface state is increased for the adsorption of one monolayer of pentacene. This particular behaviour has not been reported for any other molecular/metal system so far. The adsorption of pentacene on the oxidized Cu(110) surface reveals that the electronic interactions and the surface corrugation determine the self-assembly of the molecular ad-layer. The second project in this thesis comprises the electronic interactions of porphyrin molecules, another representative of molecular semiconductors, with ultrathin insulator layers. The main question here was how the electronic interactions between the molecules and the substrate change with increasing insulator thickness and whether it is possible to electronically decouple the molecules from the substrate for one or two monolayer thin insulator films. A detailed growth study of NaCl on different metal surfaces led to samples, which were homogenously covered with 1 ML of NaCl and thus could be investigated by non-local analysis techniques like UPS and XPS. Low temperature STS and angle-resolved UPS data showed that the CuOEP molecules strongly interact with the Cu(111) and Ag(111) substrate leading to unoccupied electronic states in the band gap of the molecule on Ag(111) and to quenching of the Shockley surfaces state for the adsorption of CuOEP on Cu(111). Further UPS and XPS measurements revealed a strong influence of the chemical environment on the binding energies, as identified by shifted peaks for CuOEP on NaCl compared to CuOEP on the metal surfaces. These peak shifts have been related to strong screening of the photoelectron hole.


Organic Electronics

Organic Electronics

Author: Hagen Klauk

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2006-12-13

Total Pages: 446

ISBN-13: 3527608621

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Edited and written by the leading researchers and engineers from such companies as Philips, 3M, Xerox, Infineon, PlasticLogic, Eastman Kodak, Dupont, AIXTRON, and Hueck Folien, this book presents unrivalled and undiluted expertise from those who know best how to assess the risks, opportunities and where this technology is really heading. As such, this practical approach complements the more scientific and fundamentals-oriented literature on the market by providing readers with a first-hand insight into industrial activities to commercialize organic electronics. Following an introduction to the topic, including the history, motivation, benefits and potentials, it reviews recent advances and covers all three important facets of organic electronics: the chemical compounds and materials, manufacturing techniques, and the resulting devices together with their current applications.


Processing and Characterization of Organic Thin Films

Processing and Characterization of Organic Thin Films

Author: Schinke Janusz

Publisher: Sudwestdeutscher Verlag Fur Hochschulschriften AG

Published: 2015-08-20

Total Pages: 204

ISBN-13: 9783838151441

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This work deals with two of the major challenges in organic electronics: (i) the optimization of organic/inorganic contacts through interface engineering and (ii) the prevention of intermixing in multilayer solution-processed devices. (i) A suitable method to control organic/inorganic interfaces, not only in terms of interface energetics but also to control the morphology of subsequent layers is the use of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs). Various SAMs from commercially available precursor molecules have been investigated in detail with the aim to optimize the processing parameters for high-throughput fabrication. On the basis of the gained knowledge and experience SAMs composed of novel molecules with strong dipole moments were investigated. (ii) The second part of this work addresses the problem of intermixing of solution-processed thin films. To this end, the film formation was studied of n-type semiconductor materials based on 1,4,5,8-naphthalenetetracarboxdiimide (NDI) with additional thermally cleavable side groups that govern the solubility of the molecules. Both polymer and small molecule organic semiconductors were studied.