Back to Search Start Over

Ground-state electron transfer in all-polymer donor-acceptor heterojunctions

Authors :
Xu, Kai
Sun, Hengda
Ruoko, Tero-Petri
Wang, Gang
Kroon, Renee
Kolhe, Nagesh B.
Puttisong, Yuttapoom
Liu, Xianjie
Fazzi, Daniele
Shibata, Koki
Yang, Chi-Yuan
Sun, Ning
Persson, Gustav
Yankovich, Andrew B.
Olsson, Eva
Yoshida, Hiroyuki
Chen, Weimin M.
Fahlman, Mats
Kemerink, Martijn
Jenekhe, Samson A.
Mueller, Christian
Berggren, Magnus
Fabiano, Simone
Xu, Kai
Sun, Hengda
Ruoko, Tero-Petri
Wang, Gang
Kroon, Renee
Kolhe, Nagesh B.
Puttisong, Yuttapoom
Liu, Xianjie
Fazzi, Daniele
Shibata, Koki
Yang, Chi-Yuan
Sun, Ning
Persson, Gustav
Yankovich, Andrew B.
Olsson, Eva
Yoshida, Hiroyuki
Chen, Weimin M.
Fahlman, Mats
Kemerink, Martijn
Jenekhe, Samson A.
Mueller, Christian
Berggren, Magnus
Fabiano, Simone
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Doping of organic semiconductors is crucial for the operation of organic (opto)electronic and electrochemical devices. Typically, this is achieved by adding heterogeneous dopant molecules to the polymer bulk, often resulting in poor stability and performance due to dopant sublimation or aggregation. In small-molecule donor-acceptor systems, charge transfer can yield high and stable electrical conductivities, an approach not yet explored in all-conjugated polymer systems. Here, we report ground-state electron transfer in all-polymer donor-acceptor heterojunctions. Combining low-ionization-energy polymers with high-electron-affinity counterparts yields conducting interfaces with resistivity values five to six orders of magnitude lower than the separate single-layer polymers. The large decrease in resistivity originates from two parallel quasi-two-dimensional electron and hole distributions reaching a concentration of similar to 10(13) cm(-2). Furthermore, we transfer the concept to three-dimensional bulk heterojunctions, displaying exceptional thermal stability due to the absence of molecular dopants. Our findings hold promise for electro-active composites of potential use in, for example, thermoelectrics and wearable electronics. Doping through spontaneous electron transfer between donor and acceptor polymers is obtained by selecting organic semiconductors with suitable electron affinity and ionization energy, achieving high conductivity in blends and bilayer configuration.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1238107422
Document Type :
Electronic Resource