Modulating the Electrical Properties of Organic Heterojunction Devices Based On Phthalocyanines for Ambipolar Sensors
Author(s) -
Seydou Ouédraogo,
Rita MeunierPrest,
Abhishek Kumar,
Mabinty Bayo-Bangoura,
Marcel Bouvet
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
acs sensors
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.055
H-Index - 57
ISSN - 2379-3694
DOI - 10.1021/acssensors.0c00877
Subject(s) - ambipolar diffusion , heterojunction , materials science , bilayer , optoelectronics , relative humidity , phthalocyanine , doping , charge carrier , analytical chemistry (journal) , nanotechnology , chemistry , electron , biochemistry , physics , chromatography , quantum mechanics , membrane , thermodynamics
Although ambipolar materials are highly studied in organic electronics, they are rarely used in gas sensors. In the present work, we studied ammonia sensing on organic heterojunctions in a bilayer configuration composed of octachlorinated metallophthalocyanines (M(Cl 8 Pc); M: Co, Cu, and Zn) as a sublayer and lutetium bis-phthalocyanine (LuPc 2 ) as a top layer. Despite the small effect of metal atom in M(Cl 8 Pc) on the device current and the interfacial energy barrier, a strong effect on the NH 3 sensing behavior was found such that Co(Cl 8 Pc)-, Cu(Cl 8 Pc)-, and Zn(Cl 8 Pc)-based devices exhibited n -type, p -type, and ambipolar charge carrier transport, respectively. Variable carrier transport has been explained by charges hopping at the interface and subsequent heterojunction formation. In particular, the ambipolar transport regime in Zn(Cl 8 Pc)-based devices is triggered by the chemical doping from NH 3 and water when the device is exposed longer under NH 3 at high humidity turning i n -type. Gas sensing studies performed in a wide concentration range of NH 3 at a variable relative humidity (rh) exhibited very high sensitivity of these devices. The best performance is obtained with Co(Cl 8 Pc)-based devices demonstrated by a very high relative response (13% at 10 ppm NH 3 ) and sensitivity (1.47%.ppm -1 ), sub-ppm limit of detection (250 ppb), and negligible interference from rh. Such superior sensing characteristics based on a new heterojunction device make it an ideal NH 3 sensor for real application.
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