Beating the thermodynamic limit with photo-activation of n-doping in organic semiconductors
Author(s) -
Xin Lin,
Berthold Wegner,
Kyung Min Lee,
Michael A. Fusella,
Fengyu Zhang,
Karttikay Moudgil,
Barry P. Rand,
Stephen Barlow,
Seth R. Marder,
Norbert Koch,
Antoine Kahn
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
nature materials
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 14.344
H-Index - 483
eISSN - 1476-4660
pISSN - 1476-1122
DOI - 10.1038/nmat5027
Subject(s) - dopant , doping , materials science , organic semiconductor , semiconductor , ohmic contact , oled , electron affinity (data page) , nanotechnology , optoelectronics , chemical physics , chemistry , molecule , organic chemistry , layer (electronics)
Chemical doping of organic semiconductors using molecular dopants plays a key role in the fabrication of efficient organic electronic devices. Although a variety of stable molecular p-dopants have been developed and successfully deployed in devices in the past decade, air-stable molecular n-dopants suitable for materials with low electron affinity are still elusive. Here we demonstrate that photo-activation of a cleavable air-stable dimeric dopant can result in kinetically stable and efficient n-doping of host semiconductors, whose reduction potentials are beyond the thermodynamic reach of the dimer's effective reducing strength. Electron-transport layers doped in this manner are used to fabricate high-efficiency organic light-emitting diodes. Our strategy thus enables a new paradigm for using air-stable molecular dopants to improve conductivity in, and provide ohmic contacts to, organic semiconductors with very low electron affinity.
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