Controlling energy levels and Fermi level en route to fully tailored energetics in organic semiconductors
Invited
Abstract
Organic semiconductors have yet to achieve simultaneous control over both the energy levels and Fermi level, which was a key breakthrough for inorganic electronics. Here, we combine two approaches from band engineering and molecular doping to demonstrate controlled shifts in ionisation potential and Fermi level of an organic thin film. We experimentally investigate the doping efficiency of a ternary blend system consisting of two host molecules, ZnPc and F8-ZnPc, and the p-dopant F6–TCNNQ. We explain the observed doping behaviour with a statistical model based on energy level shifts of both host and dopant materials, resulting from the quadrupole moments of all involved molecules. We thereby demonstrate that band tuning crucially affects the doping process in organic semiconductors. The practice of comparing host and dopant energy levels must consider the long-range electrostatic shifts, arising from the quadrupole interactions to consistently explain the doping mechanism in organic semiconductors.
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Presenters
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Moritz Riede
Department of Physics, University of Oxford
Authors
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Ross Warren
Department of Physics, University of Oxford
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Alberto Privitera
Department of Physics, University of Oxford
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Pascal Kaienburg
Department of Physics, University of Oxford
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Andreas Ejdrup Lauritzen
Department of Physics, University of Oxford
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Oliver Thimm
IEK5-Photovoltaics, Forschungszentrum Jülich
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Jenny Nelson
Department of Physics, Imperial College London
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Moritz Riede
Department of Physics, University of Oxford