Chain Conformation Control of Fluorene-Benzothiadiazole Copolymer Light-Emitting Diode Efficiency and Lifetime.

ACS applied materials & interfaces 13:2 (2021) 2919-2931

Authors:

Bingjun Wang, Hao Ye, Moritz Riede, Donal DC Bradley

Abstract:

The β-phase, in which the intermonomer torsion angle of a fraction of chain segments approaches ∼180°, is an intriguing conformational microstructure of the widely studied light-emitting polymer poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene) (PFO). Its generation can in turn be used to significantly improve the performance of PFO emission-layer-based light-emitting diodes (LEDs). Here, we report the generation of β-phase chain segments in a copolymer, 90F8:10BT, containing 90% 9,9-dioctylfluorene (F8) and 10% 2,1,3-benzothiadiazole (BT) units and show that significant improvements in performance also ensue for LEDs with β-phase 90F8:10BT emission layers, generalizing the earlier PFO results. The β-phase was induced by both solvent vapor annealing and dipping copolymer thin films into a solvent/nonsolvent mixture. Subsequent absorption spectra show the characteristic fluorene β-phase peak at ∼435 nm, but luminescence spectra (∼530 nm peak) and quantum yields barely change, with the emission arising following efficient energy transfer to the lowest-lying excited states localized in the vicinity of the BT units. For ∼5% β-phase chain segment fraction relative to 0% β-phase, the LED luminance at 10 V increased by ∼25% to 5940 cd m<sup>-2</sup>, the maximum external quantum efficiency by ∼61 to 1.91%, and the operational stability from 64% luminance retention after 20 h of operation to 90%. Detailed studies addressing the underlying device physics identify a reduced hole injection barrier, higher hole mobility, correspondingly more balanced electron and hole charge transport, and decreased carrier trapping as the dominant factors. These results confirm the effectiveness of chain conformation control for fluorene-based homo- and copolymer device optimization.

Direct observation and evolution of electronic coupling between organic semiconductors

Physical Review Materials American Physical Society 5:1 (2021) 015601

Authors:

Sameer Vajjala Kesava, Moritz K Riede

Abstract:

The electronic wave functions of an atom or molecule are affected by its interactions with its environment. These interactions dictate electronic and optical processes at interfaces, and is especially relevant in the case of thin film optoelectronic devices such as organic solar cells. In these devices, charge transport and interfaces between multiple layers occur along the thickness or vertical direction, and thus such electronic interactions between different molecules—same or different—are crucial in determining the device properties. Here, we introduce an in situ spectroscopic ellipsometry data analysis method called differential analysis in real time (DART) with the ability to directly probe electronic coupling due to intermolecular interactions along the thickness direction using vacuum-deposited organic semiconductor thin films as a model system. The analysis, which does not require any model fitting, reveals direct observations of electronic coupling between frontier orbitals under optical excitations leading to delocalization of the corresponding electronic wave functions with thickness or, equivalently, number of molecules away from the interface in C60 and MeO-TPD deposited on an insulating substrate ( Si O 2 ) . Applying the same methodology for C60 deposited on phthalocyanine thin films, the analyses shows strong, anomalous features—in comparison to C60 deposited on Si O 2 —of the electronic wave functions corresponding to specific excitation energies in C60 and phthalocyanines. Translation of such interactions in terms of dielectric constants reveals plasmonic type resonance absorptions resulting from oscillations of the excited state wave functions between the two materials across the interface. Finally, reproducibility, angstrom-level sensitivity, and simplicity of the method are highlighted showcasing its applicability for studying electronic coupling between any vapor-deposited material systems where real-time measurements during thin film growth are possible.

Molecular doped organic semiconductor crystals for optoelectronic device applications

Journal of Materials Chemistry C 8:43 (2020) 14996-15008

Authors:

Z Qin, C Gao, WWH Wong, MK Riede, T Wang, H Dong, Y Zhen, W Hu

Abstract:

© The Royal Society of Chemistry. For semiconductors, doping is an efficient approach to tune their energy bandgaps, charge transport, and optical properties which could enable the improvement of the corresponding performances and open up the possibility of multifunction integration. Recently, significant advances have been achieved in molecular doped organic semiconductors, especially doped organic semiconductor single crystals (OSSCs) which have features of well-defined packing structures, long-range molecular orders, and low-density defects for fundamental studies and improved properties. In this review, we will give a summary of the exciting progress of molecular doped OSSCs from the aspects of selection criteria of molecular dopants, general growth methods, and resulting optoelectronic properties as well as their applications in optoelectronic devices. Finally, a brief conclusion is given with challenges and perspectives of molecular doped OSSCs and their related promising research directions in this field. This journal is

The role of charge recombination to spin-triplet excitons in non-fullerene acceptor organic solar cells

(2020)

Authors:

Alexander J Gillett, Alberto Privitera, Rishat Dilmurat, Akchheta Karki, Deping Qian, Anton Pershin, Giacomo Londi, William K Myers, Jaewon Lee, Jun Yuan, Seo-Jin Ko, Moritz K Riede, Feng Gao, Guillermo C Bazan, Akshay Rao, Thuc-Quyen Nguyen, David Beljonne, Richard H Friend

The Elusive Nature of Carbon Nanodot Fluorescence: An Unconventional Perspective

The Journal of Physical Chemistry C American Chemical Society (ACS) 124:40 (2020) 22314-22320

Authors:

Marcello Righetto, Francesco Carraro, Alberto Privitera, Giulia Marafon, Alessandro Moretto, Camilla Ferrante