Charge Transport in Disordered Solids with Applications in Electronics

Charge Transport in Disordered Solids with Applications in Electronics

Author: Sergei Baranovski

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons

Published: 2006-08-14

Total Pages: 498

ISBN-13: 0470095059

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The field of charge conduction in disordered materials is a rapidly evolving area owing to current and potential applications of these materials in various electronic devices This text aims to cover conduction in disordered solids from fundamental physical principles and theories, through practical material development with an emphasis on applications in all areas of electronic materials. International group of contributors Presents basic physical concepts developed in this field in recent years in a uniform manner Brings up-to-date, in a one-stop source, a key evolving area in the field of electronic materials


Charge Transport in Liquid Crystalline Smectic and Discotic Organic Semiconductors

Charge Transport in Liquid Crystalline Smectic and Discotic Organic Semiconductors

Author: Sanjoy Paul

Publisher:

Published: 2016

Total Pages: 205

ISBN-13:

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Organic electronics offer the possibility of producing low cost, flexible, and large area electronics. Organic semiconductors (OSCs) (organic polymers and crystals), used in organic electronics, are promising materials for novel optical and electronic devices such as organic light emitting diodes, organic field effect transistors, organic sensors, and organic photovoltaics (OPVs). OSCs are composed of molecules weakly held together via van der Walls forces rather than covalent bonds as in the case of inorganic semiconductors such as Si. The combined effect of small wave function overlap, spatial and energetic disorder in organic semiconducting materials lead to localization of charge carriers and, in many cases, hopping conduction. OSCs also differ from conventional semiconductors in that charges photogeneration (e.g., in OPVs) proceeds via the production, diffusion, and dissociation of excitons. Liquid crystalline OSCs (LCOSCs) are semiconductors with phases intermediate between the highly ordered crystalline and completely disordered liquid phases. These materials offer many advantages including facile alignment and the opportunity to study the effects of differing intermolecular geometries on transfer integrals, disorder-induced trapping, charge mobilities, and photogeneration efficiency. In this dissertation work, we explored the photogeneration and charge transport mechanisms in a few model smectic and discotic LCs to better understand the governing principles of photogeneration and charge transport using conventional and novel methods based on the pulsed laser time-of-flight charge carrier transport technique. Four major interrelated topics were considered in this research. First, a sample of smectic LC was aligned in order to compare the resulting hole mobility to that of an unaligned sample, with the aim of understanding how the intermolecular alignment over large length scales affects the hopping probability. The role of the polarization of the photogenerating light was also explored in the context of these anisotropic systems. Next, the photogeneration and charge transport was investigated as a function of temperature, electric field, the wavelength and intensity of photogenerating light. Different exciton dissociation interfaces between the electrode and the LC to probe the details of the mechanism of excitonic dissociation (e.g., surface mediated generation vs. exciton-exciton fusion) were explored. Next, we have also developed a new method of spatially resolving the photogeneration and transport mechanisms in inhomogeneous OSCs called "scanning time of flight microscopy (STOFm)" which simultaneously obtains 2d images of transport coefficients and polarized transmittance. The STOFm was extensively used to study charge transport in various structured semiconductors: smectics, discotics, as well as in phase separated LC/polymer structures. Finally, this work involves characterization and analysis of transport in a number of new phenyl-naphthalene LC OSCs.


Simulations of Charge Transport in Organic Compounds

Simulations of Charge Transport in Organic Compounds

Author: Thorsten Vehoff

Publisher: Sudwestdeutscher Verlag Fur Hochschulschriften AG

Published: 2010

Total Pages: 176

ISBN-13: 9783838120812

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To aid the design of organic semiconductors, we study the charge transport properties of organic liquid crystals and single crystals. The aim is to find structure-property relationships linking the chemical structure as well as the morphology with the bulk charge carrier mobility of the compounds. To this end, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are performed yielding realistic equilibrated morphologies. Partial charges and molecular orbitals are calculated using quantum chemical methods. The molecular orbitals are then mapped onto the molecular positions and orientations, which allows calculation of the transfer integrals between nearest neighbors using the molecular orbital overlap method. Thus realistic transfer integral distributions and their autocorrelations are obtained. In case of organic crystals two descriptions of charge transport, namely semi-classical dynamics (SCD) and kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) based on Marcus rates, are studied. In KMC one assumes that the wave function is localized on one molecule, while in SCD it is spread over a limited number of neighboring molecules. The results are compared amongst each other and, where available, with experimental data.


Theoretical and Spectroscopic Studies of Energy and Charge Transport in Organic Semiconductors

Theoretical and Spectroscopic Studies of Energy and Charge Transport in Organic Semiconductors

Author: Patrick Charles Tapping

Publisher:

Published: 2017

Total Pages: 159

ISBN-13:

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The performance of organic semiconductor devices is heavily dependent on the precise molecular-level arrangement and overall morphology of the functional layers. In organic photovoltaic applications, exciton mobility, fission/fusion or dissociation, as well as charge transport and separation are some of the morphology-dependent processes that are of interest for efficient device design. In this work a combination of experimental and computational techniques are used to elucidate the behaviour of excitons in conjugated polymer and small-molecule semiconductor systems. While there is an emphasis on photovoltaic applications, many concepts are generally applicable to other organic electronic applications such organic light emitting diodes and photodetectors. In Chapter 3, a pump-push-probe transient absorption technique is used to observe high-energy "hot" excitons formed by photoexcitation of the conjugated polymer poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT). The work demonstrates the ability to clearly isolate the transient signal of the hot exciton decay processes from the thermalised exciton population, where picosecond and sub-picosecond relaxation of hot excitons through torsional motion in the disordered polymer chain is observed. In addition, the push-induced dissociation of high-energy excitons into free charge carriers is able to be quantified and an upper bound on the exciton binding energy determined. Spectroscopic experiments on P3HT are accompanied by a hybrid quantum-classical exciton hopping model in Chapter 4. Coarse-grained molecular dynamics are used to obtain realistic structures of P3HT free chains and nanofibre aggregates, to which a Frenkel-Holstein exciton model and Monte Carlo hopping simulation is applied. This novel approach captures exciton transport properties of polymer systems with a monomer-level of detail unachievable with continuum or lattice style models, but at a large scale infeasible with fully quantum calculations. Reasonable quantitative agreement with experimental observables is obtained, offering insight into the morphology-dependence of exciton transport in conjugated polymers. In particular, the observed tendency for exciton migration to the core of the polymer aggregate can explain the relatively poor performance of highly crystalline or nanofibre-based polymer solar cells, as well as the unusually high fluorescence yield of aqueous P3HT nanoparticles. The effect of disorder in small molecule semiconductor films is investigated in Chapter 5 in the context of singlet exciton fission and triplet fusion under the influence of applied magnetic fields. A model is presented that extends the historical theory of molecular spin interactions in crystalline materials and corrects the current understanding in the literature regarding such disordered solid-phase systems. The possibility of using the fluorescence response to magnetic fields to probe the morphology and degree disorder in the films is demonstrated. Extending the model to solution-phase behaviour is then discussed in Chapter 6, where the potential of improving the light-harvesting ability of solar cells through a molecular triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion process is considered. Molecular dynamics simulations are used to obtain physical parameters and collision geometry of the emitter molecules in solution. The complications of applying a static model of triplet fusion to the dynamic solution-phase behaviour are elucidated and the potential of synthesising an ideal upconversion emitter molecule is discussed.


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.


Simulations of Charge Transport in Organic Compounds

Simulations of Charge Transport in Organic Compounds

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 2010

Total Pages:

ISBN-13:

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To aid the design of organic semiconductors, we study the charge transport properties of organic liquid crystals, i.e. hexabenzocoronene and carbazole macrocycle, and single crystals, i.e. rubrene, indolocarbazole and benzothiophene derivatives (BTBT, BBBT). The aim is to find structure-property relationships linking the chemical structure as well as the morphology with the bulk charge carrier mobility of the compounds. To this end, molecular dynamics (MD) simulations are performed yielding realistic equilibrated morphologies. Partial charges and molecular orbitals are calculated based on single molecules in vacuum using quantum chemical methods. The molecular orbitals are then mapped onto the molecular positions and orientations, which allows calculation of the transfer integrals between nearest neighbors using the molecular orbital overlap method. Thus we obtain realistic transfer integral distributions and their autocorrelations. In case of organic crystals the differences between two descriptions of charge transport, namely semi-classical dynamics (SCD) in the small polaron limit and kinetic Monte Carlo (KMC) based on Marcus rates, are studied. The liquid crystals are investigated solely in the hopping limit. To simulate the charge dynamics using KMC, the centers of mass of the molecules are mapped onto lattice sites and the transfer integrals are used to compute the hopping rates. In the small polaron limit, where the electronic wave function is spread over a limited number of neighboring molecules, the Schroedinger equation is solved numerically using a semi-classical approach. The results are compared for the different compounds and methods and, where available, with experimental data. The carbazole macrocycles form columnar structures arranged on a hexagonal lattice with side chains facing inwards, so columns can closely approach each other allowing inter-columnar and thus three-dimensional transport. When taking only intra-columnar transport into account, t.


Organic Field-Effect Transistors

Organic Field-Effect Transistors

Author: Zhenan Bao

Publisher: CRC Press

Published: 2018-10-03

Total Pages: 578

ISBN-13: 1351837575

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The remarkable development of organic thin film transistors (OTFTs) has led to their emerging use in active matrix flat-panel displays, radio frequency identification cards, and sensors. Exploring one class of OTFTs, Organic Field-Effect Transistors provides a comprehensive, multidisciplinary survey of the present theory, charge transport studies, synthetic methodology, materials characterization, and current applications of organic field-effect transistors (OFETs). Covering various aspects of OFETs, the book begins with a theoretical description of charge transport in organic semiconductors at the molecular level. It then discusses the current understanding of charge transport in single-crystal devices, small molecules and oligomers, conjugated polymer devices, and charge injection issues in organic transistors. After describing the design rationales and synthetic methodologies used for organic semiconductors and dielectric materials, the book provides an overview of a variety of characterization techniques used to probe interfacial ordering, microstructure, molecular packing, and orientation crucial to device performance. It also describes the different processing techniques for molecules deposited by vacuum and solution, followed by current technological examples that employ OTFTs in their operation. Featuring respected contributors from around the world, this thorough, up-to-date volume presents both the theory behind OFETs and the latest applications of this promising technology.