Method and device to modify the electrical properties of an organic and/or molecular material
09726915 · 2017-08-08
Assignee
- Universite De Strasbourg (Strasbourg, FR)
- Centre National De La Recherche Scientifique (Paris, FR)
- Centre International De Recherche Aux Frontieres De La Chimie (Strasbourg, FR)
Inventors
- James A. Hutchison (Strasbourg, FR)
- Cyriaque Genet (Strasbourg, FR)
- Thomas W. Ebbesen (Strasbourg, FR)
- Paolo Samori (Strasbourg, FR)
- Emanuele Orgiu (Strasbourg, FR)
- Jino George (Strasbourg, FR)
- Francesco STELLACCI (Morges, CH)
Cpc classification
G02B6/1225
PHYSICS
International classification
G02F1/03
PHYSICS
G02B17/00
PHYSICS
Abstract
Disclosed is a method to modify the electrical conductivity of an organic and/or molecular material including the steps of providing a reflective or photonic structure and of placing the organic and/or molecular material in or on the structure. The method also includes providing a structure (1) which has an electromagnetic mode which is by design, or can be made by way of adjustment or tuning, resonant with a transition in the organic and/or molecular material (2) and controlling, in particular enhancing, the mobility of the charge carriers, and thus the electrical current, in the organic and/or molecular material (2), by way of strongly coupling the material (2) to the local electromagnetic vacuum field and exploiting the formation of extended macroscopic states in the material.
Claims
1. A method to modify the electrical properties of an organic and/or molecular material comprising: providing a reflective or photonic structure; placing said organic and/or molecular material in or on said structure; providing a structure which has an electromagnetic mode which is by design, or is made by way of adjustment or tuning, resonant with a transition in said organic and/or molecular material; controlling a conductivity, and thus mobility of the charge carriers, resulting in an increased electrical current, in said organic and/or molecular material, by strongly coupling said material to a local electromagnetic vacuum field; and exploiting a formation of states of spatial extension exceeding the size of molecules or polymer chains of said material.
2. The method according to claim 1, wherein a Q-factor, defined as a ratio of a wavelength of a resonance divided by a half-width of the resonance, a resonant electromagnetic mode is between 10 and 1 000.
3. The method according to claim 1, wherein the electromagnetic mode is a surface plasmon mode.
4. The method according to claim 1, wherein the electromagnetic mode is a cavity mode.
5. The method according to claim 4, wherein the cavity mode is defined by two opposed mirror structures.
6. The method according to claim 5, wherein the two opposed mirror structures are two parallel planar mirrors.
7. The method according to claim 1, wherein the reflective structure comprises at least one metallic surface made of a metal film or of two opposed metal films.
8. The method according to claim 1, wherein the transition in the molecules of the material is an electronic transition.
9. The method according to claim 1, wherein the transition in the molecules of the material is a vibrational transition.
10. The method according to claim 1, wherein, by coupling to the local electromagnetic vacuum field and exploiting a resulting rearrangement of the energy levels of the molecules of the material, in inducing a formation of hybrid light-matter Dicke states in the organic material in order to increase conductivity of the organic material and the charge carrier mobility, said Dicke states extending over a large number of molecules of the material.
11. The method according to claim 10, wherein said Dicke states extend over an area extending at least 100 nm in all directions.
12. The method according to claim 1, wherein the method is applied in a functional device comprising said reflective or photonic structure, said device being one of an electronic device, an electro-optical device, an optoelectronic device, a photovoltaic device or a light emitting device.
13. The method according to claim 1, wherein a Q-factor, defined as a ratio of a wavelength of a resonance divided by a half-width of the resonance, a resonant electromagnetic mode is between 10 and 100.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING FIGURES
(1) The present invention will be further described hereinafter by way of non limitative examples and in connection with the attached schematical drawings wherein:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
(19) As set out before, the invention concerns a method to modify the electrical conductivity of an organic and/or molecular material comprising the steps of providing a reflective or photonic structure and of placing said organic and/or molecular material in or on said structure.
(20) According to the invention, said method consists further in providing a structure 1 which has an electromagnetic mode which is by design, or can be made by way of adjustment or tuning, resonant with a transition in said organic and/or molecular material 2 and in controlling, in particular enhancing, the mobility of the charge carriers, and thus the electrical current, in said organic and/or molecular material 2, by means of strongly coupling said material 2 to the local electromagnetic vacuum field and exploiting the formation of extended macroscopic states in said material.
(21) More particularly, said method consists, by means of coupling to local electromagnetic vacuum field and exploiting the resulting rearrangement of the energy levels of the molecules of the material, in inducing the formation of hybrid light-matter Dicke states in the organic material in order to increase its conductivity and the charge carrier mobility, said Dicke states extending over a large number of molecules of the material, preferably over an area extending at least 100 nm in all directions.
(22) Various experiments conducted by the inventors have shown that the collective Dicke states (P−/P+), formed by strongly coupling organic material to an optical mode and usually formed by about 10.sup.3 to 10.sup.5 molecules (or oscillators) interacting with said optical mode (
(23) These improvements seem to result from the fact that the Dicke states extend over dimensions associated with the mode, which is orders of magnitude larger than the nanometer size molecules of the organic material.
(24) Furthermore, the experiments show that the inventive method may be applied with expected beneficial increase of conductivity to all types of molecules and materials having an absorption transition.
(25) A first type of experimental setups used by the inventors to collect data are shown on
(26) As shown on
(27) A first series of experiments were performed by the inventors with said first experimental setup of
(28) The following examples 1 to 3 and the related
Example 1: P3HT (poly(3-hexyl thiophene)) (Commercial Name Sepiolid P200® by BASF)
(29) Exceptionally large Rabi splitting, on the order of 1.2 eV is observed for P3HT as shown in
Example 2: PDI or PDIF-CN2: (N,N′-bis(n-fluoro-alkyl)-(1,7 and 1,6)-dicyanoperylene-3,4:9,10-bis(dicarboximide), (Commercial Name: ActivInk® N1100 by Polyera Corporation)
(30) PDI is an n-type semiconductor with the LUMO level at −4.5 eV.
Example 3: (P(NDI2OD-T2)) Poly([N,N′-bis(2-octyldodecyl)-naphthalene-1,4,5,8-bis(dicarboximide)-2,6-diyl]-alt-5,5′-(2,2′-bithiophene))) (Commercial Name: ActivInk® N2200 by Polyera Corporation)
(31) P(NDI2OD-T2) is a n-type polymeric semiconductor with the LUMO at −4 eV.
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(33) The experimental data shown on
(34) In the context of a second series of experiments, the inventors used again three different organic semiconductor materials, namely naphthalene-bis(dicarboximide) polymer known as P(NDI2OD-T2) and perylene di-imide (PDI) small molecule derivatives shown in
(35) As before for examples 1 to 3, and in order to assess the conductivity of polaritons versus that of normal carriers, current-voltage (I-V) curves were recorded for thin films of the organic semiconductors between two Al electrodes 5, 5′ in the absence of mirrors, then with a bottom Al 3′ mirror alone and finally with both bottom and top mirrors 3 and 3′.
(36) Now, taking into consideration the significant possibility that the bottom and top metallic mirrors 3′, 3 may act as conduits for current, the inventors used the device 4′ of
(37) As shown on
(38) Even in these non-optimal (or rather unfavorable) conditions, a conductivity increase of nearly 2 (two) orders of magnitude was observed for PDI2EH-CN.sub.2 at least, as shown on
(39) For the two other tested materials in this second series of experiments realised with the non-optimal setup construction of
(40) The gap distance, g in
(41) The above examples of both series of experiments confirm that indeed charge carrier mobility and conductivity in organic materials can be dramatically enhanced by strong coupling. More precisely, the experimental data lead to the conclusion that the increase of the conductivity in a given material is directly resulting from an equivalent increase in charge carrier mobility in said material.
(42) Since organic conductors and devices are generally sandwiched between two electrodes to ensure even current distribution, the strong coupling effect can be added by simply tuning the distance between the two metallic electrodes so that they form a resonant mode with the electronic transition in the material.
(43) According to the invention, the optical resonance can also be provided by surface plasmon modes and other photonic structures, and can be adapted by the skilled person for the device design for a given application.
(44) Indeed, as surface plasmon (SP) modes may be strongly coupled to molecular materials (see previously mentioned publications of Schwartz T. et al. and Hutchison J. A. et al., as well as Aberra Guebrou, S., Symonds, C., Homeyer, E., Plenet, J. C., Gartstein, Y. N., Agranovich, V. M. & Bellessa, J. “Coherent emission from a disordered organic semiconductor induced by strong coupling to surface plasmons” Phys. Rev. Lett. 108, 066401 (2012)), an experimental setup was realised wherein periodic arrays of dimples (indentations) and holes milled by Focused Ion Beam or FIB (Zeiss Auriga) in a metal film provided a simple way to generate resonances at given wavelengths (see for example Ebbesen, T. W., Lezec, H. J., Ghaemi, H. F., Thio, T. & Wolff, P. A. “Extraordinary optical transmission through sub-wavelength hole arrays” Nature 391, 667-69 (1998)). A molecular film was then spin-coated on the surface of the dimple or hole arrays and the period was varied to tune the SP resonance, strong coupling was generated when it matched the electronic transition. For the purpose of measuring conductivity, such hexagonal arrays were milled in the bottom Al mirror 3′ separating the electrodes as illustrated in
(45) More specifically, the configuration setup of
(46) As can be seen in
(47) Although the conductivity enhancement is smaller on plasmonic arrays, the link between the conductivity increase and the mobility was confirmed by gating experiments on hole array structures as shown in
(48) The device in this figure has a staggered structure and is composed of: Al (40 nm thick layer) acting as a top gate; ˜600 nm thick layer of Cytop, a polymer dielectric acting as a gate insulator (∈.sub.r=2.1); 100 nm of PDI2EH-CN.sub.2 as the semiconductor layer; Al electrodes and a nanohole array structure (W=50 μm, L=50 μm). The surface plasmon modes may be modified by the application of the dielectric due the evanescent extent of the electromagnetic field through and beyond the semiconductor layer.
(49) The reference device (bottom view on the right in
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(51) The observed order of magnitude boost in conductivity corresponds to a similar increase in carrier mobility.
(52) The reduced enhancement of the conductivity measured over hole arrays with respect to the results obtained in the Fabry-Perot configuration might stem from the fact that the plasmonic electric field in the polymer is essentially perpendicular to the metal film. It seems indeed consistent to assume that the field component involved in the polaritonic mediated conductivity is the longitudinal one which turns out to be much reduced with respect to the transverse one due to the relatively large optical contrast between the metal and the polymer.
(53) The choice of metal Al for the electrical contact was made to inject carriers into P− since it is known that the electron injection is more favourable from low work-function metals. The large Rabi splittings naturally perturb the electronic structure of the semiconductors, pushing the ground state down and modifying the work-function as we have shown elsewhere (see previously mentioned publications of Hutchison J. A. et al. and Canaguier-Durant A. et al.). For instance the change in the work-function for PDI2EH-CN.sub.2 was measured by the macroscopic Kelvin Probe technique on a resonant hole arrays and found to be ˜0.1 eV. This change in work function could also possibly modify the I-V characteristics.
(54) In relation to these series of experiments, the current enhancement surprisingly observed by the inventors in the strongly coupled organic semiconductors can a posteriori be explained by the extended coherence of the polaritonic state over lengths that correspond to the mode volume (˜ on the scale of the wavelength of the resonance) in sharp contrast with the normal carrier that is mostly confined to the molecular (or a few molecules) scale, in particular at room temperature. Possibly the reduced effective mass derived from the dispersion of the polaritonic state (eq. 2) might also contribute by decreasing the carrier-phonon interaction. Another contribution to the conductivity enhancement could arise from the Rabi splitting bringing the carrier state closer to the Fermi level of the organic semiconductor.
(55) Nevertheless like for all conductors, disorder can strongly hinder charge transport whatever the carriers. This seems to be confirmed by the lack of conductivity enhancement for P(NDI2OD-T2) and PDI2EH-Br.sub.2 despite the efficient strong coupling. These materials are known to present more disorder, especially when spin-coated onto the samples as done here. Conversely, the PDI2EH-CN.sub.2 family of molecules are known to stack well even under this preparation method and give good conductivities in agreement with the findings of the inventors (Jones, B. A., Ahrens, M. J., Yoon, M.-H., Facchetti, A., Marks, T. J. & Wasielewski, M. R. “High-mobility air-stable n-type semiconductors with processing versatility: Dicyanoperylene-3,4:9,10-bis(dicarboximides)” Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 116, 6523-6526 (2004)).
(56) Regarding the experimental circumstances having lead to the results exposed herein, the used devices were prepared and characterized as follows:
(57) Al films were evaporated on glass substrates or PDMS (polydimethylsiloxane) blocks. The gaps between the electrodes and the bottom mirror were milled with a Zeiss Auriga Focused Ion Beam. The organic semiconductors were spin-coated on the surface to the desired thickness (except for N1100 which was thermally evaporated). The film thickness was measured with a profilometer. The top mirror on PDMS was then applied to the film and the strong coupling was checked by transmission spectroscopy (
(58) The current-voltage measurements were carried out with a Keithley 2635 on two-terminal devices where a film of the above-mentioned materials would serve as the semiconductor film. The measurements were performed in ambient conditions between two electrodes.
(59) In order to avoid any significant influence of contact effects, the inventors noticed that the drain and the source (two or three terminal devices) should be separated by at least 35 μm.
(60) In relation to the foregoing specification, the invention also concerns, as illustrated very schematically by way of examples in
(61) Said structure 1, which is part of the device 4, has an electromagnetic mode which is by design or can be made by way of adjustment or tuning, resonant with a transition in said organic material 2 and in controlling, in particular enhancing, the mobility of the charge carriers, and thus the electrical current, in said organic and/or molecular material 2, by means of strongly coupling said material 2 to the local electromagnetic vacuum field and exploiting the formation of extended macroscopic states in said material.
(62) By way of two illustrative and alternative examples, the structure 1 can be made of two opposed reflective planar surface structures 3 and 3′ (
(63) It should be noticed that with the constructive solution of
(64) Therefore, the invention also encompasses a device 4 consisting of a three terminal gated device, such as a field effect transistor.
(65) Of course, the invention is not limited to the preferred embodiments described and represented herein, changes can be made or equivalents used without departing from the scope of the invention.