Increasingly high hopes are being placed on organic semiconductors for a variety of applications. Progress along these lines, however, requires the design and growth of increasingly complex systems with well-defined structural and electronic properties. These issues have been studied and reviewed extensively in single-component layers, but the focus is gradually shifting towards more complex and functional multi-component assemblies such as donor-acceptor networks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe electronic character of a π-conjugated molecular overlayer on a metal surface can change from semiconducting to metallic, depending on how molecular orbitals arrange with respect to the electrode's Fermi level. Molecular level alignment is thus a key property that strongly influences the performance of organic-based devices. In this work, we report how the electronic level alignment of copper phthalocyanines on metal surfaces can be tailored by controlling the substrate work function.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCodeposition of two molecular species [copper phtalocyanine (CuPc, donor) and perfluoropentacene (PFP, acceptor)] on noble metal (111) surfaces leads to the self-assembly of an ordered mixed layer with a maximized donor-acceptor contact area. The main driving force behind this arrangement is assumed to be the intermolecular C-H ⋯ F hydrogen-bond interactions. Such interactions would be maximized for a coplanar molecular arrangement.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe molecule/metal interface is the key element in charge injection devices. It can be generally defined by a monolayer-thick blend of donor and/or acceptor molecules in contact with a metal surface. Energy barriers for electron and hole injection are determined by the offset from HOMO (highest occupied) and LUMO (lowest unoccupied) molecular levels of this contact layer with respect to the Fermi level of the metal electrode.
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