Engineering interfaces between organic semiconductors is an
effective way to tailor organic electronic device performance, as charge transport
and light interaction efficiency are strongly influenced by electronic coupling at
molecular interfaces. Scanning transmission electron microscopy is routinely
used to analyze interfaces at the atomic scale; however, its use for organic
materials is limited due to the electron beam sensitivity of organic molecules,
buried interfaces, and the semicrystalline nature of organics. In this work, we
developed a workflow to correlate charge behavior at organic interfaces with
their chemistry and structure, even when interface components are chemically
and structurally similar and mixed at the nanoscale. We used this workflow to
reveal the nanoscale mechanism behind enhanced charge transfer at the
heterojunction between two-dimensional carbon nitride catalysts (poly heptazine imide (PHI) and poly-triazine imide (PTI)) during the oxygen
reduction reaction. We found that PHI crystallites grow on PTI layers formed at the gas−liquid interface in the salt melt, following
the [001]PTI/[001]K‑PHI orientation. This crystallographic alignment promotes the charge transfer from PTI to PHI and creates an
electron-rich interface. Electron energy loss spectroscopy showed quaternary N atoms in the heterojunction, which aid O2
adsorption and 2e− reduction to H2O2, as well as a higher proportion of terminal and bridging N atoms, promoting charge separation
during the reaction
Is data on this page outdated, violates copyrights or anything else? Report the problem now and we will take corresponding actions after reviewing your request.