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Chimica Fisica dei Materiali Avanzati Part 12 – Plastic electronics. Laurea specialistica in Scienza e Ingegneria dei Materiali Curriculum Scienza dei Materiali. Basic questions. Is it possible to do electronics with molecules?
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Chimica Fisica dei Materiali AvanzatiPart 12 – Plastic electronics Laurea specialistica in Scienza e Ingegneria dei Materiali Curriculum Scienza dei Materiali Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Basic questions • Is it possible to do electronics with molecules? • What sort of molecules to use? Carbon-based, similar to those used by biology, e.g. for photosynthesis • How will we manipulate and position molecules to create the architectures we want? • Transport molecules in solution (as biology does) • Assemble molecules in correct juxtaposition through use of ‘weak’ intermolecular interactions (e.g., hydrophobic vs. hydrophilic) Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Plastic electronics • Plastics (or, more correctly, polymers), are traditionally used within the electronics industry as ‘passive’ materials, for encapsulation or for their electrically- insulating properties. However, there is now a class of polymers which can behave as semiconductors or as metals. • Our understanding of the semiconductor physics of these materials has enabled us to use them as the active components in a range of devices. • Polymer light-emitting diodes, LEDs, providing full color range and high efficiency as well as solar cells show particular promise. • The electronic behavior of these polymers is very different from inorganic semiconductors such as silicon or gallium arsenide. • Polymer electronic devices require different strategies to make them useful. In some respects, these strategies resemble those already adopted by biology, for example in photosynthesis. Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Large electronic conductivities in organicmaterials • Charge transfer crystals • E.g. TTF-TCNQ, first metallic conductivity (1973) • Organic superconductors • E.g., (TMTSF)2PF6 (1980) • (BEDT-TTF)2X Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Conducting Polymers 1977: First conducting polymer, Poly(acetylene) Shirakawa, MacDiarmid, Heeger Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Structures of some conjugated polymers Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Electronic structure and chargecarriers in conductingpolymers In conductingpolymers, doping is the resultof a redoxprocess. Charges are bound and deep in the gap polaron bipolaron • A polaron (= radical ion) has both charge (+e) and spin (±1/2) • A bipolaron (dication) has charge (+2e) but no spin Polarons (A) and bipolarons (B) in PPP Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Doping effect on the opticalproperties: electrochromism Electrochemical doping ofpolypyrrole Bipolaron absorptions (2) polaron bipolaron Interband absorption (3 eV) Polaron absorptions (3) Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Current Uses of Conducting Polymers Antistatic Coatings and Conducting Films Electrochromic Displays? Memory Devices? (HP Labs/Princeton) Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Light Emitting Diodes 1990: Burroughs, Friend (Cambridge) light emission from undoped semiconducting polymer 2003: full color range possible Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
OLEDs Everywhere 2000: first commercial products with OLEDs Advantage in color spectrum beats solid state materials Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Polymeric Photovoltaics Solar cell efficiencies of ~ 2% (up to 6% in labs) Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Thin Film Transistors 2004: both p and n-type materials are known Critical Advances: Crystallinity and purity Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Organic Semiconductors • Molecular Materials: • polycrystalline • vapor deposited • Polymeric Materials: • semi-crystalline • solution processed Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Mobility of organic semiconductors Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Motivations for organic electronics • Organic TFTs show poor performance compared to silicon CMOS • But organic TFTs also show the potential for extremely low cost production (printing) • Organic TFTs are in a stage of development as silicon MOSFETs were 30 years ago • Organic TFT electronics certainly will not replace CMOS • But organic TFT electronics may open new low cost / low performance (but high volume!) markets Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Polymer electronics • Low-end, high volume electronic applications, based on: • Mechanical flexibility • Low-cost • Large area • Potential applications: • Electronic barcodes • Memories • Displays (e-paper) Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Rubber Stamped, Large-Area Plastic Active Matrix Backplanes 10 µm Design Rules, Patterned by Single-Impression Microcontact Printing PNAS 98(9), 4835-4840 (2001). Science 291, 1502-1503 (2001). Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
E-paper Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Key feature: solution processing Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Materials and technology Flexible, all-plasticfieldeffect transistor Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Technology Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Operation of the polymer transistor Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Light emitting diode Organic light emitting diode consists of a thin film (30-500 nm) of an emitting organic compound sandwiched between appropriate anode and cathode layers. A relatively modest voltage (typically 2 - 10 Volts) applied across the material will cause it to emit light in a process called electroluminescence. Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Steps of the electroluminescence process • Charge (electrons and holes) injection • Charge transport • Charge recombination and exciton formation • Exciton radiative relaxation Friend, R.H.; Gymer, R.W.; Holmes, A.B.; Burroughes, J.H.; Marks, R.N.; Taliani, C.; Bradley, D.D.C.; Dos Santos, D.A.; Brédas, J.L.; Logdlund, M.; Salaneck, W.R. Nature, 1999, 397, 121. Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Mechanism of electroluminescence in organic semiconductors 1. Charge (electrons and holes) injection Positive polaron = radical cation Negative polaron = radical anion Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Mechanism of electroluminescence in organic semiconductors (cont’d) Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Some common electroluminescent polymers:poly(phenylenevinylene)s (PPVs) Murray, M.M.; Holmes, A.B. in “Semiconducting Polymers, Chemistry, Physics and Engineering” Hadziioannou G and van Hutten, P.F. Eds. Wiley-VCH 1999, pp1-32Murray, M.M.; Holmes, A.B. in “Semiconducting Polymers, Chemistry, Physics and Engineering” Hadziioannou G and van Hutten, P.F. Eds. Wiley-VCH 1999, pp1-32 Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Light emitting metal chelates Mitschke, U.; Bauerle, P. J. Mater. Chem. 2000, 10, 1471 Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Electroluminescence efficiency Adachi, C.; Baldo, M.A.; Thompson, M.E.; Forrest S.R. J. Appl. Phys. 2001, 90, 5048 Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
PHOSPHORESCENT OLEDS (PHOLED)s • The internal quantum efficiency of the phosphorescent OLEDs can be in principle increased to 100%, because both singlet and triplet excitons can emit radiatively. OLEDs prepared with these heavy metal complexes are the most efficient OLEDs reported to date, with internal quantum efficiencies > 75% and external efficiencies > 20%. Baldo, M.A.; O’Brien, D.F.; You, Y.; Shoutstikov, A.; Silbey, S.; Thompson, M.E.; Forrest, S.R. Nature, 1998, 395, 151 Baldo, M.A.; Lamansky, S.; Burrows, P.E.; Thompson, M.E.; Forrest, S.R. Appl. Phys. Lett., 1999, 75, 4 Zhang, Q.; Zhou, Q.; Cheng, Y.; Wang, L.; Ma, D.; Jing, X.; Wang, F. Adv. Mater., 2004, 16, 432 Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Working principle of polymer photovoltaic cells (OPV) 1. Absorption of incident light by the active layer 2. Generation of charge carriers 3. Collection of separated charge carriers at contacts Separation of positive and negative charge carriers by an asymmetry (junction) Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Large area printed devices • Active area of a single stripe: 10 cm2 • Isc: > 10 mA/cm2 (under 100 mW/cm² simulated AM1.5) • Voc: ~ 0.6 V • FF: < 0.5 (limited by serial resistivity of the substrate) Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Working principle of a bulk heterojunction 1. Incoming photons are absorbed • Creation of excitons on the Donor /Acceptor 2. Exciton is separated at the donor /acceptor interface • Creation of charge carriers 3. Charge carriers within drift distance reach electrodes • Creation of short circuit current ISC 1. The “photodoping” leads to splitting of Fermi levels • Creation of open circuit voltage VOC 2. Charge transport properties, module geometry • Fill factor FF Pel,max = VOC x ISC x FF Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Correlation between morphology and transport Fullerene traps e- e- and h+ are able to go through h+ are blocked [Fullerene] < 17% (no Percolation !) [Fullerene] > 17% [Fullerene] >> 17% µh,bulk < µh polymer µe,bulk~ µe polymer µh,bulk ~ µh polymer µe,bulk < µe polymer µh,bulk ~ µh polymer µe,bulk > µe polymer • Upon blending of materials, macroscopic transport properties of single components may change significantly Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Integrated Circuits (IC) based on organics Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Block diagram of an identification tag Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat
Design of organic identification tags • The 48 bit identification IC Corso CFMA. LS-SIMat