101 research outputs found

    Conductivity in organic semiconductors hybridized with the vacuum field

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    Organic semiconductors have generated considerable interest for their potential for creating inexpensive and flexible devices easily processed on a large scale [1-11]. However technological applications are currently limited by the low mobility of the charge carriers associated with the disorder in these materials [5-8]. Much effort over the past decades has therefore been focused on optimizing the organisation of the material or the devices to improve carrier mobility. Here we take a radically different path to solving this problem, namely by injecting carriers into states that are hybridized to the vacuum electromagnetic field. These are coherent states that can extend over as many as 10^5 molecules and should thereby favour conductivity in such materials. To test this idea, organic semiconductors were strongly coupled to the vacuum electromagnetic field on plasmonic structures to form polaritonic states with large Rabi splittings ca. 0.7 eV. Conductivity experiments show that indeed the current does increase by an order of magnitude at resonance in the coupled state, reflecting mostly a change in field-effect mobility as revealed when the structure is gated in a transistor configuration. A theoretical quantum model is presented that confirms the delocalization of the wave-functions of the hybridized states and the consequences on the conductivity. While this is a proof-of-principle study, in practice conductivity mediated by light-matter hybridized states is easy to implement and we therefore expect that it will be used to improve organic devices. More broadly our findings illustrate the potential of engineering the vacuum electromagnetic environment to modify and to improve properties of materials.Comment: 16 pages, 13 figure

    Controlling Ambipolar Transport and Voltage Inversion in Solution-Processed Thin-Film Devices through Polymer Blending

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    Ambipolar semiconductors are attracting a great interest as building blocks for photovoltaics and logic applications. Field-effect transistors built on solution-processable ambipolar materials hold strong promise for the engineering of large-area low-cost logic circuits with a reduced number of devices components. Such devices still suffer from a number of obstacles including the challenging processing, the low Ion/Ioff, the unbalanced mobility, and the low gain in complementary metal–oxide–semiconductor (CMOS)-like circuits. Here, we demonstrate that the simple approach of blending commercially available n- and p-type polymers such as P(NDI2OD-T2), P3HT, PCD-TPT, PDVT-8, and IIDDT-C3 can yield high-performing ambipolar field-effect transistors with balanced mobilities and Ion/Ioff > 10^7. Each single component was studied separately and upon blending by means of electrical characterization, ambient ultraviolet photoelectron spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and grazing incidence wide angle X-ray scattering to unravel the correlation between the morphology/structure of the semiconducting films and their functions. Blends of n- and p-type semiconductors were used to fabricate CMOS-like inverter circuits with state-of-the-art gains over 160 in the case of P(NDI2OD-T2) blended with PDVT-8. Significantly, our blending approach was successful in producing semiconducting films with balanced mobilities for each of the four tested semiconductor blends, although the films displayed different structural and morphological features. Our strategy, which relies on establishing a correlation between ambipolar performances, film morphology, molecular structure, and blending ratio, is extremely efficient and versatile; thus it could be applied to a wide range of polymers or solution processable small molecules

    Self-Suspended Nanomesh Scaffold for Ultrafast Flexible Photodetectors Based on Organic Semiconducting Crystals

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    Self‐standing nanostructures are of fundamental interest in materials science and nanoscience and are widely used in (opto‐)electronic and photonic devices as well as in micro‐electromechanical systems. To date, large‐area and self‐standing nanoelectrode arrays assembled on flexible substrates have not been reported. Here the fabrication of a hollow nanomesh scaffold on glass and plastic substrates with a large surface area over 1 mm2 and ultralow leakage current density (≈1–10 pA mm−2 @ 2 V) across the empty scaffold is demonstrated. Thanks to the continuous sub‐micrometer space formed in between the nanomesh and the bottom electrode, highly crystalline and dendritic domains of 6,13‐bis(triisopropylsilylethinyl)pentacene growing within the hollow cavity can be observed. The high degree of order at the supramolecular level leads to efficient charge and exciton transport; the photovoltaic detector supported on flexible polyethylene terephthalate substrates exhibits an ultrafast photoresponse time as short as 8 ns and a signal‐to‐noise ratio approaching 10^5. Such a hollow scaffold holds great potential as a novel device architecture toward flexible (opto‐)electronic applications based on self‐assembled micro/nanocrystals

    A nanomesh scaffold for supramolecular nanowire optoelectronic devices

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    Supramolecular organic nanowires are ideal nanostructures for optoelectronics because they exhibit both efficient exciton generation as a result of their high absorption coefficient and remarkable light sensitivity due to the low number of grain boundaries and high surface-to-volume ratio. To harvest photocurrent directly from supramolecular nanowires it is necessary to wire them up with nanoelectrodes that possess different work functions. However, devising strategies that can connect multiple nanowires at the same time has been challenging. Here, we report a general approach to simultaneously integrate hundreds of supramolecular nanowires of N,Nâ€Č-dioctyl-3,4,9,10-perylenedicarboximide (PTCDI-C8) in a hexagonal nanomesh scaffold with asymmetric nanoelectrodes. Optimized PTCDI-C8 nanowire photovoltaic devices exhibit a signal-to-noise ratio approaching 107, a photoresponse time as fast as 10 ns and an external quantum efficiency >55%. This nanomesh scaffold can also be used to investigate the fundamental mechanism of photoelectrical conversion in other low-dimensional semiconducting nanostructures

    Current crowding issues on nanoscale planar organic transistors for spintronic applications

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    The predominance of interface resistance makes current crowding ubiquitous in short channel organic electronics devices but its impact on spin transport has never been considered. We investigate electrochemically doped nanoscale PBTTT short channel devices and observe the smallest reported values of crowding lengths, found for sub-100 nm electrodes separation. These observed values are nevertheless exceeding the spin diffusion lengths reported in the literature. We discuss here how current crowding can be taken into account in the framework of the Fert–Jaffrùs model of spin current propagation in heterostructures, and predict that the anticipated resulting values of magnetoresistance can be significantly reduced. Current crowding therefore impacts spin transport applications and interpretation of the results on spin valve devices

    Improving the electrical performance of solution processed oligothiophene thin-film transistors via structural similarity blending

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    Here we show that the blending of structurally similar oligothiophene molecules is an effective approach to improve the field-effect mobility and Ion/Ioff as compared to single component based transistors. The effect of addition of each component is studied extensively using a wide array of methods such as X-ray diffraction, ToF-SIMS, and ambient UPS correlated with the electrical characterization

    Polaritonic molecular clock for all-optical ultrafast imaging of wavepacket dynamics without probe pulses

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    Conventional approaches to probing ultrafast molecular dynamics rely on the use of synchronized laser pulses with a well-defined time delay. Typically, a pump pulse excites a molecular wavepacket. A subsequent probe pulse can then dissociate or ionize the molecule, and measurement of the molecular fragments provides information about where the wavepacket was for each time delay. Here, we propose to exploit the ultrafast nuclear-position-dependent emission obtained due to large light–matter coupling in plasmonic nanocavities to image wavepacket dynamics using only a single pump pulse. We show that the time-resolved emission from the cavity provides information about when the wavepacket passes a given region in nuclear configuration space. This approach can image both cavity-modified dynamics on polaritonic (hybrid light–matter) potentials in the strong light–matter coupling regime and bare-molecule dynamics in the intermediate coupling regime of large Purcell enhancements, and provides a route towards ultrafast molecular spectroscopy with plasmonic nanocavitiesThis work has been funded by the European Research Council grant ERC-2016-STG-714870 and the Spanish Ministry for Science, Innovation, and Universities—AEI grants RTI2018-099737-B-I00, PCI2018-093145 (through the QuantERA program of the European Commission), and CEX2018-000805-M (through the María de Maeztu program for Units of Excellence in R&D
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