2012
DOI: 10.1021/nn303043y
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Electrical Property Heterogeneity at Transparent Conductive Oxide/Organic Semiconductor Interfaces: Mapping Contact Ohmicity Using Conducting-Tip Atomic Force Microscopy

Abstract: We demonstrate mapping of electrical properties of heterojunctions of a molecular semiconductor (copper phthalocyanine, CuPc) and a transparent conducting oxide (indium-tin oxide, ITO), on 20-500 nm length scales, using a conductive-probe atomic force microscopy technique, scanning current spectroscopy (SCS). SCS maps are generated for CuPc/ITO heterojunctions as a function of ITO activation procedures and modification with variable chain length alkyl-phosphonic acids (PAs). We correlate differences in small l… Show more

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Cited by 41 publications
(63 citation statements)
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References 86 publications
(260 reference statements)
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“…Conductive-tip atomic force microscopy has been used to map the electrical properties of ITO; the results show that the conductivity of the electrode surface is spatially heterogeneous on the nm length scale, and this heterogeneity has been correlated with electrochemical properties and OPV performance. [35][36][37] We hypothesize that PDIPAs bound to the more electrically conductive regions ("hot spots") 37 on ITO undergo more rapid ET than PDI-PAs bound to less conductive regions. In the latter case, the dominant mechanism for ET is likely to involve both lateral self-exchange and exchange between a PDI and ITO at a "hot spot".…”
Section: ·2 Perylene Diimide Modifiersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Conductive-tip atomic force microscopy has been used to map the electrical properties of ITO; the results show that the conductivity of the electrode surface is spatially heterogeneous on the nm length scale, and this heterogeneity has been correlated with electrochemical properties and OPV performance. [35][36][37] We hypothesize that PDIPAs bound to the more electrically conductive regions ("hot spots") 37 on ITO undergo more rapid ET than PDI-PAs bound to less conductive regions. In the latter case, the dominant mechanism for ET is likely to involve both lateral self-exchange and exchange between a PDI and ITO at a "hot spot".…”
Section: ·2 Perylene Diimide Modifiersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The increase of its ionization potential and electron affinity leads to an important n-type acceptor behavior. [34][35][36] We reported previously that thin films of pure MnPc present a typical diode-like transport behavior, with a large voltage drop of about 1.5 V. [7] Such transport behavior has been extensively reported and is characteristic for this and structurally similar organic systems such as porphyrins, [37] other phthalocyanine molecules with metallic centers like Cu, Ni, Al, and Mg, [38][39][40][41] and even fluorinated phthalocyanine systems such as the ones investigated in this work. [7] For MnPc, the orbital alignment around the Fermi level presents a significant metal 3d contribution, rather than a pure π character.…”
Section: Phthalocyanine-based Thin Films Organic Heterostructuresmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…CSFS-AFM evaluations were performed to establish and identify the surface profile and simultaneously obtain typical topographical, tunnelling and current/voltage properties of the developed and exfoliated ultra-thin Q2D WO 3 nanoflakes [26][27][28][29]. This procedure was done using Bruker MultiMode-8 Atomic Force System with installed Peak Force TUNA module (model: MM8-PFTUNA for MultiMode8 AFM system, Germany).…”
Section: Structural and Physical-chemical Characterisationmentioning
confidence: 99%