Molybdenum oxide is used as a low-resistance anode interfacial layer in applications such as organic light emitting diodes and organic photovoltaics. However, little is known about the correlation between its stoichiometry and electronic properties, such as work function and occupied gap states. In addition, despite the fact that the knowledge of the exact oxide stoichiometry is of paramount importance, few studies have appeared in the literature discussing how this stoichiometry can be controlled to permit the desirable modification of the oxide's electronic structure. This work aims to investigate the beneficial role of hydrogenation (the incorporation of hydrogen within the oxide lattice) versus oxygen vacancy formation in tuning the electronic structure of molybdenum oxides while maintaining their high work function. A large improvement in the operational characteristics of both polymer light emitting devices and bulk heterojunction solar cells incorporating hydrogenated Mo oxides as hole injection/extraction layers was achieved as a result of favorable energy level alignment at the metal oxide/organic interface and enhanced charge transport through the formation of a large density of gap states near the Fermi level.
Here, we report on the dual functionality of tungsten oxide for application as an efficient electron and hole injection/transport layer in organic light‐emitting diodes (OLEDs). We demonstrate hybrid polymer light‐emitting diodes (Hy‐PLEDs), based on a polyfluorene copolymer, by inserting a very thin layer of a partially reduced tungsten oxide, WO2.5, at the polymer/Al cathode interface to serve as an electron injection and transport layer. Significantly improved current densities, luminances, and luminous efficiencies were achieved, primarily as a result of improved electron injection at the interface with Al and transport to the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the polymer, with a corresponding lowering of the device driving voltage. Using a combination of optical absorption, ultraviolet spectoscopy, X‐ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and photovoltaic open circuit voltage measurements, we demonstrate that partial reduction of the WO3 to WO2.5 results in the appearance of new gap states just below the conduction band edge in the previously forbidden gap. The new gap states are proposed to act as a reservoir of donor electrons for enhanced injection and transport to the polymer LUMO and decrease the effective cathode workfunction. Moreover, when a thin tungsten oxide film in its fully oxidized state (WO3) is inserted at the ITO anode/polymer interface, further improvement in device characteristics was achieved. Since both fully oxidized and partially reduced tungsten oxide layers can be deposited in the same chamber with well controlled morphology, this work paves the way for the facile fabrication of efficient and stable Hy‐OLEDs with excellent reproducibility.
In this letter, highly efficient hole injection was demonstrated in hole only devices based on organic semiconductors with different highest occupied molecular orbital level and transport properties. The barrierless hole injection was achieved by using a substoichiometric MoOx thin film (consisting of 65% Mo+6 and 35% Mo+5) as a higly effective anode interfacial layer. The current in these devices was found to be space charge limited, achieved due to the formation of highly efficient anode ohmic contact via the excellent band alignment through occupied gap states at the ITO/MoOx and MoOx/organic semiconductor modified interface. Quite remarkably, the efficiency of hole injection was found to be almost independent of the MoOx thickness, which is indicative of perfect band alignment at the anode interface.
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