60 research outputs found

    Critical Evaluation of Organic Thin-Film Transistor Models

    Full text link
    Thin-film transistors (TFTs) represent a wide-spread tool to determine the charge-carrier mobility of materials. Mobilities and further transistor parameters like contact resistances are commonly extracted from the electrical characteristics. However, the trust in such extracted parameters is limited, because their values depend on the extraction technique and on the underlying transistor model. We propose a technique to establish whether a chosen model is adequate to represent the transistor operation. This two-step technique analyzes the electrical measurements of a series of TFTs with different channel lengths. The first step extracts the parameters for each individual transistor by fitting the full output and transfer characteristics to the transistor model. The second step checks whether the channel-length dependence of the extracted parameters is consistent with the model. We demonstrate the merit of the technique for distinct sets of organic TFTs that differ in the semiconductor, the contacts, and the geometry. Independent of the transistor set, our technique consistently reveals that state-of-the-art transistor models fail to reproduce the correct channel-length dependence. Our technique suggests that contemporary transistor models require improvements in terms of charge-carrier-density dependence of the mobility and/or the consideration of uncompensated charges in the transistor channel.Comment: 20 pages, 10 figure

    Low-voltage organic thin-film transistors based on [n]phenacenes

    Get PDF
    Low-voltage p-channel organic thin-film transistors based on [n]phenacene (n = 5, 6 or 7) were fabricated on glass and on flexible poly(ethylene 2,6-naphthalate) (PEN) substrates. For the first time, these phenacenes were combined with two ultrathin gate dielectrics based on aluminium oxide and a monolayer of octadecyl-phosphonic acid in three different transistor structures. Regardless of the substrate and the transistor structure, the field-effect mobility is found to increase with increasing length of the conjugated [n]phenacene core, leading to the best performance for [7]phenacene. The largest average field-effect mobility we have obtained is 0.27 cm2/V·s for transistors on glass and 0.092 cm2/V·s for transistors on flexible PEN

    Nearly diffraction limited FTIR mapping using an ultrastable broadband femtosecond laser tunable from 1.33 to 8 µm

    Get PDF
    Micro-Fourier-transform infrared (FTIR) spectroscopy is a widespread technique that enables broadband measurements of infrared active molecular vibrations at high sensitivity. SiC globars are often applied as light sources in tabletop systems, typically covering a spectral range from about 1 to 20 µm (10 000 - 500 cm−1) in FTIR spectrometers. However, measuring sample areas below 40x40 µm2 requires very long integration times due to their inherently low brilliance. This hampers the detection of ultrasmall samples, such as minute amounts of molecules or single nanoparticles. In this publication we extend the current limits of FTIR spectroscopy in terms of measurable sample areas, detection limit and speed by utilizing a broadband, tabletop laser system with MHz repetition rate and femtosecond pulse duration that covers the spectral region between 1250 - 7520 cm−1 (1.33 - 8 µm). We demonstrate mapping of a 150x150 µm2 sample of 100 nm thick molecule layers at 1430 cm−1 (7 µm) with 10x10 µm2 spatial resolution and a scan speed of 3.5 µm/sec. Compared to a similar globar measurement an order of magnitude lower noise is achieved, due to an excellent long-term wavelength and power stability, as well as an orders of magnitude higher brilliance

    Remotely controlled isomer selective molecular switching

    Get PDF
    Nonlocal addressing—the “remote control”—of molecular switches promises more efficient processing for information technology, where fast speed of switching is essential. The surface state of the (111) facets of noble metals, a confined two-dimensional electron gas, provides a medium that enables transport of signals over large distances and hence can be used to address an entire ensemble of molecules simultaneously with a single stimulus. In this study we employ this characteristic to trigger a conformational switch in anthradithiophene (ADT) molecules by injection of hot carriers from a scanning tunneling microscope (STM) tip into the surface state of Cu(111). The carriers propagate laterally and trigger the switch in molecules at distances as far as 100 nm from the tip location. The switching process is shown to be long-ranged, fully reversible, and isomer selective, discriminating between cis and trans diastereomers, enabling maximum control.PostprintPeer reviewe

    Bipolar conductance switching of single anthradithiophene molecules

    Get PDF
    The authors acknowledge funding by the Emmy-Noether-Program of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the SFB 767, and the Baden-Württemberg Stiftung. R.P. and A.A. thank the Basque Departamento de Universidades e Investigacion (grant no. IT-756-13) and the Spanish Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad (grant no. FIS2013-48286-C2-8752-P) for financial support.Single molecular switches are basic device elements in organic electronics. The pentacene analogue anthradithiophene (ADT) shows a fully reversible binary switching between different adsorption conformations on a metallic surface accompanied by a charge transfer. These transitions are activated locally in single molecules in a low-temperature scanning tunneling microscope . The switching induces changes between bistable orbital structures and energy level alignment at the interface. The most stable geometry, the “off” state, which all molecules adopt upon evaporation, corresponds to a short adsorption distance at which the electronic interactions of the acene rings bend the central part of the molecule toward the surface accompanied by a significant charge transfer from the metallic surface to the ADT molecules. This leads to a shift of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital down to the Fermi level (EF). In the “on” state the molecule has a flat geometry at a larger distance from the surface; consequently the interaction is weaker, resulting in a negligible charge transfer with an orbital structure resembling the highest occupied molecular orbital when imaged close to EF. The potential barrier between these two states can be overcome reversibly by injecting charge carriers locally into individual molecules. Voltage-controlled current traces show a hysteresis characteristic of a bipolar switching behavior. The interpretation is supported by first-principles calculations.PostprintPeer reviewe

    La importancia de la personalidad del traductor en los itinerarios de especialidad y en la selección de personal

    Get PDF
    Treball Final de Grau en Traducció i Interpretació. Codi: TI0983. Curs acadèmic: 2016/2017A pesar de que a simple vista no lo pueda parecer, la personalidad de los traductores influye mucho más de lo que se cree en el proceso traductor y en la toma de decisiones, como han puesto de manifiesto estudios empíricos. Para analizar cuáles son las diferencias individuales en la personalidad de los traductores en la elección del itinerario de especialidad, se ha llevado a cabo un estudio con los estudiantes de los cuatro itinerarios de traducción de la Universidad Jaume I, a fin de ver si podemos identificar los rasgos típicos de los estudiantes de cada itinerario. Además, dada la gran importancia de la personalidad en las tareas de traducción, también se ha entrevistado a responsables de tres agencias de traducción para ver si la personalidad de los traductores es un factor relevante a la hora de reclutar personal. Se ha comprobado así que sí hay algunos rasgos comunes en la personalidad de los estudiantes de cada itinerario y que realmente esta cuestión no es un factor relevante en las agencias de traducción, sino que se valora, sobre todo, el trabajo diario y la calidad de las pruebas de traducción

    Electric-field-driven direct desulfurization

    Get PDF
    The ability to elucidate the elementary steps of a chemical reaction at the atomic scale is important for the detailed understanding of the processes involved, which is key to uncover avenues for improved reaction paths. Here, we track the chemical pathway of an irreversible direct desulfurization reaction of tetracenothiophene adsorbed on the Cu(111) closed-packed surface at the submolecular level. Using the precise control of the tip position in a scanning tunneling microscope and the electric field applied across the tunnel junction, the two carbon–sulfur bonds of a thiophene unit are successively cleaved. Comparison of spatially mapped molecular states close to the Fermi level of the metallic substrate acquired at each reaction step with density functional theory calculations reveals the two elementary steps of this reaction mechanism. The first reaction step is activated by an electric field larger than 2 V nm–1, practically in absence of tunneling electrons, opening the thiophene ring and leading to a transient intermediate. Subsequently, at the same threshold electric field and with simultaneous injection of electrons into the molecule, the exergonic detachment of the sulfur atom is triggered. Thus, a stable molecule with a bifurcated end is obtained, which is covalently bound to the metallic surface. The sulfur atom is expelled from the vicinity of the molecule.PostprintPeer reviewe

    Chiral and catalytic effects of site-specific molecular adsorption

    Get PDF
    Open access funded by Max Planck Society. The authors acknowledge the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG, German Research Foundation) under Germany’s Excellence Strategy-EXC-2123 Quantum Frontiers - 390837967; Core program PC2-PN23080202 and the PN-III-P2-2.1-PED-2021-0378 (contract no. 575PED/2022) granted projects, financed by the Romanian Ministry of Research, Innovation and Digitalization/UEFISCDI; and the generous allocation of computer time at the computing center of Donostia International Physics Center and at the Red Española de Supercomputación (project QHS-2021-2-0019). A.A. acknowledges support from Project No. PID2019-103910GB-I00, funded by MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/ and FEDER Una manera de hacer Europa, and Project No. IT-1527-22 funded by the Basque Government.The changes of properties and preferential interactions based on subtle energetic differences are important characteristics of organic molecules, particularly for their functionalities in biological systems. Only slightly energetically favored interactions are important for the molecular adsorption and bonding to surfaces, which define their properties for further technological applications. Here, prochiral tetracenothiophene molecules are adsorbed on the Cu(111) surface. The chiral adsorption configurations are determined by Scanning Tunneling Microscopy studies and confirmed by first-principles calculations. Remarkably, the selection of the adsorption sites by chemically different moieties of the molecules is dictated by the arrangement of the atoms in the first and second surface layers. Furthermore, we have investigated the thermal effects on the direct desulfurization reaction that occurs under the catalytic activity of the Cu substrate. This reaction leads to a product that is covalently bound to the surface in chiral configurations.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe

    Controlling single molecule conductance by a locally induced chemical reaction on individual thiophene units

    Get PDF
    The authors acknowledge the Emmy-Noether-Program of the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, the SFB 767, Core Program PN19-03 (contract number 21 N/08.02.2019) founded by the Romanian Ministry of Research and Innovation, Basque Departamento de Universidades e Investigación (grant no. IT-756-13), the Spanish Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (grant no. FIS2013-48286-C2-8752-P and FIS2016-75862-P) andthe Operational Programme Research, Development and Education financed by European Structural and Investment Funds and the Czech Ministry of Education, Youth and Sports (Project No. SOLID21 CZ.02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000760).Among the prerequisites for the progress of single‐molecule‐based electronic devices are a better understanding of the electronic properties at the individual molecular level and the development of methods to tune the charge transport through molecular junctions. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM) is an ideal tool not only for the characterization, but also for the manipulation of single atoms and molecules on surfaces. The conductance through a single molecule can be measured by contacting the molecule with atomic precision and forming a molecular bridge between the metallic STM tip electrode and the metallic surface electrode. The parameters affecting the conductance are mainly related to their electronic structure and to the coupling to the metallic electrodes. Here, the experimental and theoretical analyses are focused on single tetracenothiophene molecules and demonstrate that an in situ‐induced direct desulfurization reaction of the thiophene moiety strongly improves the molecular anchoring by forming covalent bonds between molecular carbon and copper surface atoms. This bond formation leads to an increase of the conductance by about 50 % compared to the initial state.Publisher PDFPeer reviewe
    corecore