The intractable brittleness and opacity of the crystalline semiconductor restrict the prospect of developing low-cost imaging systems. Here, infrared visualization technologies are established with large-area, semi-transparent organic upconversion devices that bring high-resolution invisible images into sight without photolithography. To exploit all photoinduced charge carriers, a monolithic device structure is proposed built on the infrared-selective, single-component charge generation layer of chloroaluminum phthalocyanine (ClAlPc) coupled to two visible light-emitting layers manipulated with unipolar charges.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCrystalline photodiodes remain the most viable infrared sensing technology of choice, yet the opacity and the limitation in pixel size reduction per se restrict their development for supporting high-resolution in situ infrared images. In this work, we propose an all-organic non-fullerene-based upconversion device that brings invisible infrared signal into human vision via exciplex cohost light-emissive system. The device reaches an infrared-to-visible upconversion efficiency of 12.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour new donor-acceptor-acceptor (D-A-A) type molecules (DTCPB, DTCTB, DTCPBO, and DTCTBO), wherein benzothiadiazole or benzoxadiazole serves as the central A bridging triarylamine (D) and cyano group (terminal A), have been synthesized and characterized. The intramolecular charge-transfer character renders these molecules with strong visible light absorption and forms antiparallel dimeric crystal packing with evident π-π intermolecular interactions. The characteristics of the vacuum-processed photovoltaic device with a bulk heterojunction active layer employing these molecules as electronic donors combining C as electronic acceptor were examined and a clear structure-property-performance relationship was concluded.
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