3 research outputs found
Mapping of Charge Distribution in Organic Field-Effect Transistors by Confocal Photoluminescence Electromodulation Microscopy
A novel method for mapping the charge
density spatial distribution
in organic field-effect transistors based on the electromodulation
of the photoluminescence is demonstrated. In field-effect transistors
exciton quenching is dominated by exciton–charge carrier interaction
so that it can be used to map the charge distribution in different
operating conditions. From a quantitative analysis of the photoluminescence
quenching, the thickness of the charge carrier accumulation layer
is derived. The injection of minority charge carriers in unipolar
conditions is unexpectedly evidenced, which is not displayed by the
electrical characteristics
ITO-Free Organic Light-Emitting Transistors with Graphene Gate Electrode
In
this work, we report on the fabrication and characterization
of organic light-emitting transistors (OLETs) within an indium–tin-oxide
(ITO)-free platform, using graphene-based transparent conductive electrodes
in place of ITO as gate electrode. A direct comparison between twin
bottom-gate/top-contacts OLETs, where a standard ITO layer is replaced
with a film made of a few graphene layers, shows that comparable electrical
characteristics can be obtained along with a clear improvement in
the electroluminescence generation characteristics. Our experimental
findings pave the way to the exploitation of graphene-based transparent
conductive electrodes within this class of emerging devices on flexible
substrates, further promoting the novel era of flexible organic electronics
Molecular Tailoring of New Thieno(bis)imide-Based Semiconductors for Single Layer Ambipolar Light Emitting Transistors
Organic molecular semiconductors
are key components for a new generation of low cost, flexible, and
large area electronic devices. In particular, ambipolar semiconductors
endowed with electroluminescent properties have the potential to enable
a photonic field-effect technology platform, whose key building blocks
are the emerging organic light-emitting transistor (OLET) devices.
To this aim, the design of innovative molecular configurations combining
effective electrical and optical properties in the solid state is
highly desirable. Here, we investigate the effect of the insertion
of a thienoÂ(bis)Âimide (TBI) moiety as end group in highly performing
unipolar oligothiophene semiconductors on the packing, electrical,
and optoelectronic properties of the resulting materials. We show
that, regardless of the HOMO–LUMO energy, orbital distribution,
and molecular packing pattern, a TBI end moiety switches unipolar
and nonemissive oligothiophene semiconductors to ambipolar and electroluminescent
materials. Remarkably, the newly developed materials enabled the fabrication
of single layer molecular ambipolar OLETs with optical power comparable
to that of the equivalent polymeric single layer devices