124 research outputs found

    Light-induced reversible modification of the work function of a new perfluorinated biphenyl azobenzene chemisorbed on Au (111)

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    This work was financially supported by EC through the Marie-Curie ITN SUPERIOR (PITN-GA-2009-238177) and IEF MULTITUDES (PIEF-GA-2012-326666), the ERC project SUPRAFUNCTION (GA-257305), the Agence Nationale de la Recherche through the LabEx project Chemistry of Complex Systems (ANR-10-LABX-0026_CSC), and the International Center for Frontier Research in Chemistry (icFRC). The work in Mons is further supported by the Interuniversity Attraction Poles Programme (P7/05) initiated by the Belgian Science Policy Office, and by the Belgian National Fund for Scientific Research (FNRS). J.C. is an FNRS research director. The synthesis team in Switzerland acknowledges financial support by the Swiss National Science Foundation (SNF) and the Swiss Nanoscience Institute (SNI)

    Structure and dynamics of pentacene on SiO2: From monolayer to bulk structure

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    We have used confocal micro Raman spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy (AFM), and x-ray diffraction (XRD) to investigate pentacene films obtained by vacuum deposition on SiO2 substrates. These methods allow us to follow the evolution of lattice structure, vibrational dynamics, and crystal morphology during the growth from monolayer, to TF, and, finally, to bulk crystal. The Raman measurements, supported by the AFM and XRD data, indicate that the film morphology depends on the deposition rate. High deposition rates yield two-dimensional nucleation and quasi-layer-by-layer growth of the T-F form only. Low rates yield three-dimensional nucleation and growth, with phase mixing occurring in sufficiently thick films, where the T-F form is accompanied by the "high-temperature" bulk phase. Our general findings are consistent with those of previous work. However, the Raman measurements, supported by lattice dynamics calculations, provide additional insight into the nature of the TFs, showing that their characteristic spectra originate from a loss of dynamical correlation between adjacent layers

    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

    Side chain engineering in indacenodithiophene- co -benzothiadiazole and its impact on mixed ionic–electronic transport properties

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    Organic semiconductors are increasingly being decorated with hydrophilic solubilising chains to create materials that can function as mixed ionic–electronic conductors, which are promising candidates for interfacing biological systems with organic electronics. While numerous organic semiconductors, including p- and n-type materials, small molecules and polymers, have been successfully tailored to encompass mixed conduction properties, common to all these systems is that they have been semicrystalline materials. Here, we explore how side chain engineering in the nano-crystalline indacenodithiophene-co-benzothiadiazole (IDTBT) polymer can be used to instil ionic transport properties and how this in turn influences the electronic transport properties. This allows us to ultimately assess the mixed ionic–electronic transport properties of these new IDTBT polymers using the organic electrochemical transistor as the testing platform. Using a complementary experimental and computational approach, we find that polar IDTBT derivatives can be infiltrated by water and solvated ions, they can be electrochemically doped efficiently in aqueous electrolyte with fast doping kinetics, and upon aqueous swelling there is no deterioration of the close interchain contacts that are vital for efficient charge transport in the IDTBT system. Despite these promising attributes, mixed ionic–electronic charge transport properties are surprisingly poor in all the polar IDTBT derivatives. Albeit a ‘‘negative’’ result, this finding clearly contradicts established side chain engineering rules for mixed ionic–electronic conductors, which motivated our continued investigation of this system. We eventually find this anomalous behaviour to be caused by increasing energetic disorder in the polymers with increasing polar side chain content. We have investigated computationally how the polar side chain motifs contribute to this detrimental energetic inhomogeneity and ultimately use the learnings to propose new molecular design criteria for side chains that can facilitate ion transport without impeding electronic transport

    In-plane Aligned Colloidal 2D WS2 Nanoflakes for Solution- Processable Thin Films with High Planar Conductivity

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    Two-dimensional transition-metal dichalcolgenides (2D-TMDs) are among the most intriguing materials for next-generation electronic and optoelectronic devices. Albeit still at the embryonic stage, building thin films by manipulating and stacking preformed 2D nanosheets is now emerging as a practical and cost-effective bottom-up paradigm to obtain excellent electrical properties over large areas. Herein, we exploit the ultrathin morphology and outstanding solution stability of 2D WS2 colloidal nanocrystals to make thin films of TMDs assembled on a millimetre scale by a layer-by-layer deposition approach. We found that a room-temperature surface treatment with a superacid, performed with the precise scope of removing the native insulating surfactants, promotes in-plane assembly of the colloidal WS2 nanoflakes into stacks parallel to the substrate, along with healing of sulphur vacancies in the lattice that are detrimental to electrical conductivity. The as-obtained 2D WS2 thin films, characterized by a smooth and compact morphology, feature a high planar conductivity of up to 1 μS, comparable to the values reported for epitaxially grown WS2 monolayers, and enable photocurrent generation upon light irradiation over a wide range of visible to near-infrared frequencie

    Discovery of Volatile Biomarkers of Parkinson’s Disease from Sebum

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    Parkinson's disease (PD) is a progressive, neurodegenerative disease that presents with significant motor symptoms, for which there is no diagnostic chemical test. We have serendipitously identified a hyperosmic individual, a "Super Smeller" who can detect PD by odor alone, and our early pilot studies have indicated that the odor was present in the sebum from the skin of PD subjects. Here, we have employed an unbiased approach to investigate the volatile metabolites of sebum samples obtained noninvasively from the upper back of 64 participants in total (21 controls and 43 PD subjects). Our results, validated by an independent cohort (n=31), identified a distinct volatiles-associated signature of PD, including altered levels of perillic aldehyde and eicosane, the smell of which was then described as being highly similar to the scent of PD by our "Super Smeller"

    Fast-Response Photonic Device Based on Organic-Crystal Heterojunctions Assembled into a Vertical-Yet-Open Asymmetric Architecture

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    Crystalline dioctyl-3,4,9,10-perylenedicarboximide nanowires and 6,13-bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl) pentacene microplates are integrated into a vertical-yet-open asymmetrical heterojunction for the realization of a high-performance organic photovoltaic detector, which shows fast photoresponse, ultrahigh signal-to-noise ratio, and high sensitivity to weak light

    Graphene exfoliation in the presence of semiconducting polymers for improved film homogeneity and electrical performances

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    We report on the production of hybrid graphene/semiconducting polymer films in one step procedure by making use of ultrasound-assisted liquid-phase exfoliation of graphite powder in the presence of π-conjugated polymers, i.e. poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) or poly[4-(4,4-dihexadecyl-4H-cyclopenta[1,2-b:5,4-b']dithiophen-2-yl)-alt-[1,2,5]thiadiazolo-[3,4-c]pyridine] (PCDTPT). The polymers were chosen in view of their different propensity to form crystalline structures, their decoration with alkyl chains that are known to possess high affinity for the basal plane of graphene, the energy levels of their frontier orbitals which are extremely similar to the work function of graphene, and their high electrical performance when integrated in field-effect transistors (FETs). The polymers act as a dispersion-stabilizing agent and prevent the re-aggregation of the exfoliated graphene flakes, ultimately enabling the production of homogeneous bi-component dispersions. The electrical characterization of few-layer graphene/PCDTPT hybrids, when integrated as active layer in bottom-contact bottom-gate FETs, revealed an increase of the field-effect mobility compared to the π-conjugated-based pristine devices, a result which can be attributed to the joint effect of the few-layer graphene sheets and semiconducting polymers improving the charge-transport in the channel of the field-effect transistor. In particular, few-layer graphene/PCDTPT films displayed a 30-fold increase of PCDTPT's mobility if compared to pristine polymer samples. Such findings represent a step forward towards the optimization of graphene exfoliation and processing into electronic devices, as well as towards improved electrical performance in organic-based field-effect transistors

    Surface induces different crystal structures in a room temperature switchable spin crossover compound

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    We investigated the influence of surfaces in the formation of different crystal structures of a spin crossover compound, namely [Fe(L)2] (LH: (2-(pyrazol-1-yl)-6-(1H-tetrazol-5-yl)pyridine), which is a neutral com- pound thermally switchable around room temperature. We observed that the surface induces the for- mation of two different crystal structures, which exhibit opposite spin transitions, i.e. on heating them up to the transition temperature, one polymorph switches from high spin to low spin and the second poly- morph switches irreversibly from low spin to high spin. We attributed this inversion to the presence of water molecules H-bonded to the complex tetrazolyl moieties in the crystals. Thin deposits were investi- gated by means of polarized optical microscopy, atomic force microscopy, X-ray diffraction, X-ray absorption spectroscopy and micro Raman spectroscopy; moreover the analysis of the Raman spectra and the interpretation of spin inversion were supported by DFT calculations
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