Time-of-flight (TOF) measurements typically require a sample thickness of several micrometers for determining the carrier mobility, thus rendering the applicability inefficient and unreliable because the sample thicknesses are orders of magnitude higher than those in real optoelectronic devices. Here, we use subphthalocyanine (SubPc):C70 as a charge-generation layer (CGL) in the TOF measurement and a commonly hole-transporting layer, N,N'-diphenyl-N,N'-bis(1,1'-biphenyl)-4,4'-diamine (NPB), as a standard material under test. When the NPB thickness is reduced from 2 to 0.3 μm and with a thin 10-nm CGL, the hole transient signal still shows non-dispersive properties under various applied fields, and thus the hole mobility is determined accordingly. Only 1-μm NPB is required for determining the electron mobility by using the proposed CGL. Both the thicknesses are the thinnest value reported to data. In addition, the flexibility of fabrication process of small molecules can deposit the proposed CGL underneath and atop the material under test. Therefore, this technique is applicable to small-molecule and polymeric materials. We also propose a new approach to design the TOF sample using an optical simulation. These results strongly demonstrate that the proposed technique is valuable tool in determining the carrier mobility and may spur additional research in this field.
Time-of-flight (TOF) measurements typically require a sample thickness of several micrometers for determining the carrier mobility, thus rendering the applicability inefficient and unreliable because the sample thicknesses are orders of magnitude higher than those in real optoelectronic devices. Here, we use subphthalocyanine (SubPc):C70 as a charge-generation layer (CGL) in the TOF measurement and a commonly hole-transporting layer, N,N'-diphenyl-N,N'-bis(1,1'-biphenyl)-4,4'-diamine (NPB), as a standard material under test. When the NPB thickness is reduced from 2 to 0.3 μm and with a thin 10-nm CGL, the hole transient signal still shows non-dispersive properties under various applied fields, and thus the hole mobility is determined accordingly. Only 1-μm NPB is required for determining the electron mobility by using the proposed CGL. Both the thicknesses are the thinnest value reported to data. In addition, the flexibility of fabrication process of small molecules can deposit the proposed CGL underneath and atop the material under test. Therefore, this technique is applicable to small-molecule and polymeric materials. We also propose a new approach to design the TOF sample using an optical simulation. These results strongly demonstrate that the proposed technique is valuable tool in determining the carrier mobility and may spur additional research in this field.
Organic materials enabled fabricating optoelectronic devices onto large-area and flexible
substrates in low-cost approaches12345. The applications such as
organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), organic photovoltaic (OPV) devices, and organic
thin-film transistors (OTFTs), are greatly progressing toward the next-generation
organic electronics because device performance considerably improves6789101112131415. Unfortunately, the inherent nature of
organic materials (i.e., the amorphous molecular structure) restricts the maximum
performance of these devices because of the relatively low carrier mobility compared
with their inorganic counterparts. Therefore, developing novel materials is essential to
improve both the optical and electronic properties161718192021.
In particular, carrier mobility is of special interest for the electronic properties
because of its great impact on the electrical transport, carrier distribution, carrier
recombination, charge separation, and charge balance condition222324252627282930313233. Because these factors
determine the device performance, an in-depth understanding and detailed analysis are
required for characterizing the properties of carrier transport.The carrier mobility can be characterized using time-of-flight (TOF) measurement,
space-charge limited current (SCLC) model, transient electroluminescence (EL)
measurement, and field-effect transistors (FETs)34353637. The
mobility evaluation through FETs provides an easy and low-cost approach because of a
simple device structure. However, the general geometry of FETs in which the current
flows parallel to the substrate may lead to an undesirable result for the OPV devices
and the OLEDs because the electrical properties in these devices are primarily dominated
by the currents perpendicular to the substrate3839. On the contrary,
the SCLC estimates the carrier mobility along the vertical direction with respect to the
substrate40. Previous reports have successfully evaluated the carrier
mobility of common materials in OLEDs4142. Although the values are in
good agreement with other measurements, a careful and proper selection of electrode for
achieving Ohmic contact is essential to satisfy the fundamentals of the SCLC model.
Therefore, the SCLC may show a highly material-dependent restriction. The transient EL
measurement use the time delay between the driving voltage pulse and the peak of EL
emission for determining the carrier mobility36. This technique was
improved over the last decade through varying the film thickness and device area for
considering the charging effect at the interface and averaged electric field across the
device, thus permeating a comparable estimation for the intrinsic property of
materials4344. Further characterization of charge trapping and
de-trapping processes has been realized for investigating the recombination
characteristics in OLEDs and OPV devices45. Because the EL measurement
requires the recombination of holes and electrons, the transportation of the carriers is
critical for determining the mobility, especially in unipolar materials which typically
exhibits an imbalanced hole and electron transport, and therefore, prohibits from
obtaining the information about hole and electron simultaneously. Among the techniques
of mobility determination, the TOF measurement estimates the transient signal from the
photo-excited carriers. Both the hole and electron mobility can be measured depending on
the polarity of the applied voltage46. The drawback of the TOF
measurement is the requirement for a thick sample (typically several micrometers) for
preventing from inaccuracy caused by an insufficient absorption to the excitation source
for most materials47484950. Limited selections of commercially
available laser sources also restrict the applications of TOF37475152.Despite these deficiencies, it is still favorable to use TOF measurement in observing the
effects of the molecular structures, trap states, scattering centers, and dispersivity
on the carrier transport47535455565758. To overcome these
deficiencies, an insertion of charge-generation layer (CGL) which possesses a high
absorption coefficient and an energy level matching with the adjacent organic layer has
been proposed for confining the carrier-generation width and improves the transient
signal for determining the mobility accurately243752535859606162. At an early state of the TOF technique,
Chen et al. used silicon as substrates for measuring the carrier mobility of EL
materials, thus showing that the wide wavelength selection of silicon to Nd:YAG laser
can act as an efficient CGL and reduces the required thickness of organic layers to the
typical value that used in organic electronic devices63. Huge progress in
exploiting new charge-generation materials was made by Wong and his group, who developed
an ambipolar, large-gap, and high-mobility fluorine-based material as a suitable
candidate for the use in CGLs5154. Wu and his group employed an
ethyl-substituted C9 material terfluorene E3, developed by Wong and his group, for
simplifying the sample preparation and determines the carrier mobility of a series of
commonly used transporting materials that have yet to be characterized by the TOF60. By incorporating a specific wavelength that is transparent to the
material under test while strongly absorbed by the CGL in the TOF measurement, a
simplified sample preparation enables an in-depth investigation into the physical
phenomena of the carrier transport37596162. Up to now, the accuracy
of the TOF measurement is still under debate, whereas it can meet an approximate
evaluation compared with other techniques6465666768.As an efficient CGL, high absorption and carrier transport are prerequisite for an
increased number of photo-excited carriers that contributes to the transient signal
through the material under test. These features are present in the photosensitized
organic materials that used in OPV devices. In our previous studies, we have fabricated
a series of devices with high performance on the basis of the subphthalocyanine (SubPc)
donor and C70 acceptor6970. Based on the same materials
system, Pandey et al. demonstrated an improved device fabrication process to
enhance the device efficiency71, thus showing the potential of the
combination of SubPc and C70 for the use in CGLs. In the current study, we
determined the hole mobility of 0.3-μm
N,N′-diphenyl-N,N′-bis(1,1′-biphenyl)-4,4′-diamine
(NPB) by using the proposed CGL, which provides a well-confined charge-generation width,
thus leading to clear non-dispersive properties under various applied voltages. Although
a 1-μm NPB was required for obtaining the non-dispersive transient signal,
the electron mobility was determined and in good agreement with previous studies. In
addition, we proposed a new concept for designing the TOF sample through simply
simulating the power-dissipation profiles in the samples. The proposed CGL was
thermal-evaporated and can be deposited underneath or atop the mater under test.
Therefore, the proposed technique was applicable to determine the carrier mobility of
polymeric materials.
Results
Thickness-tunable and high-performance SubPc:C70 CGL
In the TOF measurement, a thickness-tunable property is preferable without
compensation on both the absorption and transport for controlling the
charge-generation width because the thickness of a CGL must be considerably
thinner than that of the material under test. Therefore, in the current study,
OPV devices were fabricated based on a structure of indium-tin-oxide
(ITO)/MoO3 (15 nm)/SubPc
(5 nm)/SubPc:C70 (1:5; x nm)/C70
(43-x nm)/bathocuproine (BCP) (8 nm)/Al, where x
is 10, 15, 20, 25, and 30 nm, for studying the effects of the
SubPc:C70 thickness on the charge generation and transport
properties. The result may be misinterpreted if a single layer of C70
was not used because the first optical-field maximum is unlikely to occur within
the active layer, as predicted by the optical modeling (Supplementary Fig. S1). Figure
1a shows the current density-voltage (J-V)
characteristics under AM 1.5G illumination at
100 mW cm−2 for the
devices with various structures. The error bar representing the standard
deviation is provided at each data point. The error of fill factor (FF) was
lower when the SubPc:C70 thickness increased, probably because of the
inhomogeneity of the thin film formation at a thinner thickness. Nevertheless,
the thickness variation has a minor influence on FF. The difference in
open-circuit voltage (VOC) is probably due to the logarithmic
relation between VOC and short-circuit current density
(JSC) and the carrier recombination caused by an
incomplete interpenetrating network between the SubPc and the C70.
Such issue, however, is beyond the scope of the current study. The main
parameter of special interest here is JSC, which represents a
photon absorption and charge transport properties The parameter
JSC showed a considerable variation when various
SubPc:C70 thickness were used. Table 1
summarizes the photovoltaic parameters for all the devices, showing that the
best power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 6.0% that can be achieved by a 25-nm
SubPc:C70. To determine the variation in JSC,
external quantum efficiency (EQE) spectra of the OPV devices were measured, as
shown in Fig. 1b. Because JSC is the
integral of the product of the EQE and AM 1.5G solar spectrum, the averaged EQE
in a wavelength range of 500 to 600 nm was directly proportional to
JSC. Although the EQE decreased with the
SubPc:C70 thickness, these values seem sufficient to allow the
carriers for flowing through the material under test in the TOF measurement.
These results indicate that the mixture of the SubPc and C70 is a
promising candidate for the use in CGLs, and its thickness allows room for
modulating according to the tested material thickness.
Figure 1
Performance of the OPV devices.
(a) J-V
characteristics for the devices with various SubPc:C70
thicknesses in a structure of ITO/SubPc
(5 nm)/SubPc:C70 (1:5; x
nm)/C70 (43-x nm)/BCP (8 nm)/Al
(100 nm), x = 10, 15, 20, 25, and
30 under AM 1.5G solar illumination at
100 mW cm−2.
(b) Corresponding EQE spectra of these OPV devices.
Table 1
Performance of the OPV devices.
Device
VOC (V)
JSC (mA
cm−2)
FF (%)
PCE (%)
10 nm
0.85 ± 0.11
7.0 ± 0.3
49 ±3
2.9 ± 0.5
15 nm
0.94 ± 0.03
8.2 ± 0.1
50 ±4
3.9 ± 0.4
20 nm
1.04 ± 0.01
10.2± 0.3
47± 3
5.0 ± 0.2
25 nm
1.04 ± 0.01
12.0± 0.4
48 ±1
6.0 ± 0.2
30 nm
0.96 ± 0.01
11.3± 0.3
45 ±1
4.9 ± 0.1
Photovoltaic parameters of OPV devices obtained under AM 1.5G
solar illumination at
100 mW cm−2.
The standard deviation for an average of fifteen devices are
provided.
Applicability of the CGL and the TOF configuration
Figure 2a compares the emission spectra at a wavelength of
355 and 532 nm from Nd:YAG laser together with the absorption
properties of organic materials used in the current study. As shown in the
figure, the NPB has absorption band in a range of 330 to 370 nm,
while it is transparent to a wavelength of 532 nm. This explains
that the typical wavelength of excitation source is 337 nm (from
N2 laser) to induce the photogenerated carriers for measuring the
carrier transient signal of the NPB without using a CGL6372. As
a matter of fact, most of organic semiconductors absorb the ultraviolet (UV)
light range because of their molecular nature, and therefore previous studies
measured the carrier mobility by using 337 or 355 nm to be the
excitation wavelength.607374757677787980 Some of
organic materials, however, especially materials with a wide band gap that
having either a low absorption coefficient or an absorption wavelength shorter
than the deep UV light, face difficulties in selecting the excitation source and
render the inaccuracy in determining the carrier mobility.6073757677 Therefore, a wavelength that is transparent to
the wide-bandgap materials while having a high photo-response to the CGL should
be a more suitable excitation source. Because the SubPc exhibits wide absorption
band from 500 to 600 nm with a shoulder around 532 nm,
it is expected that the mixture of the SubPc and C70 would be a
promising CGL upon the incident wavelength of 532 nm, as the
photo-response and charge-generation ability of the OPV device composed of the
SubPc and C70 was extraordinarily prominent according to the high
absorption, EQE, and internal quantum efficiency (IQE) (see Supplementary Figure S2 for detail in
determining absorption and IQE). Besides concerning the above properties, the
energy level alignment between a CGL and the material under test is crucial for
the injection of the photogenerated carriers into the tested material. Figure 2b shows an energy level diagram of TOF sample using
the NPB as the tested material and with a SubPc:C70 mixed layer as
the CGL. The molecular structures of organic materials are provided. The
photogenerated holes were easily injected into the NPB because of the absence of
energetic barrier between the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) levels
at the SubPc:C70/NPB interface. However, the lowest unoccupied
molecular orbital (LUMO) levels between the CGL and the NPB were not matched,
thus resulting in large injection barrier that may impede the electron injection
across the SubPc:C70/NPB interface. This issue may be resolved
through inserting an injection layer and/or applying a relatively high bias to
promote the electron injection from the CGL into the NPB, the latter one has
been proven to be feasible and thereby the electron mobility was determined as
shown in the previous study72. Two kinds of experiments were
performed in the current study; one is the TOF sample without the CGL under
illumination of 355 nm, another incorporates with the CGL under
illumination of 532 nm, as shown in Fig. 2c.
The laser pulse impinged through the ITO electrode for all the samples. Figure 2d illustrates the setup and working mechanism of the
TOF measurement with a CGL using a thickness relatively less than the tested
material. The laser-pumped and dissociated carriers were transported through the
material with a thickness of L under an applied voltage (V) from a
power supply, which creates an electric field (E) to drive holes or
electrons, depending on the polarity of the bias applied to ITO. Al electrode
collected the carriers, which contribute to the current (I) that being
recorded by an oscilloscope with a resistor for observing the photovoltage
transient signal. By reading the transit time (tT) from the
transient signal, the carrier mobility can be determined using the following
equation:
Figure 2
Configuration of the proposed TOF measurement.
(a) Comparison
between emission spectra of 355 and 532 nm from Nd:YAG laser and
extinction coefficients of organic materials used in the current study. The
extinction coefficient of NPB was magnified twofold. Optical properties of
OPV device with 6% PCE is provided. (b) Energy-level diagram and
molecular structures of organic materials. (c) Device structures of
TOF samples without (w/o) and with (w/) a CGL (SubPc:C70) for
laser illumination at 355 and 532 nm, respectively. (d)
Schematic diagram of the TOF measurement with employment of the CGL. The
solid and open circles denote electron and hole, respectively. All the
structures are not scaled with a real device.
Comparisons of the hole transient signals for the 2- and 0.3-μm
NPB without and with the CGL. Under the photoexcitation, excitons were
dissociated within the SubPc:C70 CGL and generates holes and
electrons that are transported by SubPc and C70 molecules,
respectively. To measure the hole transient signal, a positive bias was applied
to the ITO electrode, photogenerated holes were swept through the NPB layer and
reaches the Al electrode. Figure 3a shows the hole
transient signal for the structure of ITO/NPB (2 μm)/Al
(100 nm) at various electric fields under 355-nm illumination,
together with an inset showing a corresponding log-log plot. The NPB is a
non-dispersive material, which showed a clear plateau and dramastic drop at the
turning point in the transient signal5758. In our case,
however, the emergence of cusps were observed, especially in high electric
fields. The presence of cusps has been observed in previous studies, which have
attributed this phenomenon to the intrinsic feature between the randomly
disordered transport sites which act as trap states for the carriers, thus
leading to the monotonically increased current instead of forming a plateau3749627981. Here, the NPB thickness of
2 μm only may also lead to a different results from
previsous studies that used the NPB thickness of
7-10 μm. Although the reason for the emergence of the
cusps is not well understood, the transient signal plotted in a log-log scale
enabled determining the transit time from the intersections of the asymptotes to
the increasing signals and tail sections, occasionally coincides with the cusps
in the linear plot. By contrast, the sample configuration of ITO/CGL
(100 nm)/NPB (2 μm)/Al (100 nm)
under 532-nm excitation showed very different transient signals, as shown in
Fig. 3b. The cusps were still observed, whereas the
tail sections drop more rapidly at different applied electric fields, as
observed in the log-log plot. This observation is ascribed to the well-confined
position of the charge generation by using the CGL with a thickness relatively
less than that of the NPB layer. In addition, the NPB is transparent to a
wavelength of 532 nm, and therefore only the thin CGL can generate
the photoexcited carriers and reaches the Al electrode simultaneously because of
the non-dispersive characteristic of the NPB. Therefore, a clear turning point
between the plateau and the tail section well defineed the transit time either
in a linear or log-log plot, when the degree of dispersion was reduced. In order
to determine the dispersion property, we used the general expression describing
the dispersivity as follows558283:
Figure 3
Hole transient signals.
Hole transient signals for a 2-μm
NPB device measured (a) without a CGL at a 355-nm excitation and
(b) with a 100-nm CGL at a 532-nm excitation when various
electric fields were applied. Hole transient signals at various electric
fields for a 0.3-μm NPB devices measured (c) without a
CGL at a 355-nm excitation and (d) with a 10-nm CGL at a 532-nm
excitation. All insets show corresponding log-log plots. The terms w/o and
w/ represent the without and with, respectively.
where t1/2 is the time that the photovoltage drops to the half
of the value of the transit time (tT). A lower W
indicates a less spread of the carrier transport through materials, thus leading
to an abrupt drop in the tail section instead of a slow descent. In general, the
main idea of estimating the W parameter is for observing the effects of
traps on molecularly doped materials because carrier spread was brought about by
these trap states that may dominate the dispersivity of materials558283. However, the carrier spread during the transport can be
influenced by the photogenerated carrier profile, because the distance that
required for reaching the Al electrode for the carriers generated at different
positions cannot approximate to be constant when the charge-generation width is
wide and comparable to the thickness of the material under test. Therefore, we
introduce the dispersion parameter to investigate the dispersivity of the tested
TOF samples. Table 2 summarizes the dispersion
parameters for all the samples (Supplementary Figure S3), except for the 0.3-μm NPB
without the CGL because the transient time was indistinguishable in this sample.
At an incident wavelength of 355 nm for the 2-μm NPB
without the CGL, the values of W was in a range of 0.25-0.30. This value
on average is twofold higher than that reported in previous studies that
obtained the value of W to 0.13 for neat NPB82. We
attributed this substantial difference to the relative thin NPB thickness of
2 μm only in the current study compared with the typical
values, 7-10 μm, in previous studis575882. When a 10-nm CGL and 532-nm excitation source were
used, the value of W decreased to less than 0.10 on average, which was
lower than the value reported previously, thus indicating a more non-dispersive
property. This result was attributed to the well-confined charge-generation
width as will be discussed in detail later. However, when the thickness of the
NPB decreased to 0.3 μm, the transient signal was
dispersive and the transit time is indeterminable without using the CGL, as
shown in Fig. 3c. This was mainly caused by the
insufficiently high absorption coefficient of the NPB at 355 nm and
thereby resulting in a broad charge-generation region. By contrast, when the
0.3-μm NPB and the CGL was used, the plateaus followed by the tail
sections were cleearly observed in the transient signals at various applied
electric fields under excitation of 532 nm, thus permitting the
determination of the transit times and the carrier mobility, as shown in Fig. 3d. When the thickness of the NPB reduced from 2 to
0.3 μm, the extracted W values slightly
increaseed from 0.07 to 0.12 on average, which is similar to the value obtained
from the NPB with the thickness of 7-10 μm under an
excitation of 337 nm. Because of the different absorption properties
between the CGL and the material under test (i.e., the use of an excitation of
532 nm at which the SubPc:C70 has a high absorption while
is transparent to the NPB), we reduced the TOF sample thickness to
0.3 μm, which is the thinnest value for determining the
hole mobility of the NPB to date.
Table 2
Transient time and dispersivity.
2-μm NPB w/o CGL @ 355 nm
2-μm NPB w/ CGL @ 532 nm
0.3-μm NPB w/ CGL @
532 nm
E
tT(μs)
t1/2(μs)
W
E
tT(μs)
t1/2(μs)
W
E
tT(μs)
t1/2(μs)
W
50 kV/cm
11.2
–
–
50 kV/cm
39.2
–
–
133 kV/cm
2.19
2.48
0.12
70 kV/cm
7.68
10.4
0.26
70 kV/cm
22.9
25.1
0.09
200 kV/cm
1.25
1.41
0.11
90 kV/cm
5.78
7.71
0.25
90 kV/cm
14.9
15.7
0.05
267 kV/cm
0.93
1.04
0.11
110 kV/cm
4.63
6.47
0.28
110 kV/cm
10.5
11.2
0.06
333 kV/cm
0.70
0.82
0.15
130 kV/cm
3.65
5.22
0.30
130 kV/cm
8.01
8.55
0.06
400 kV/cm
0.55
0.68
0.19
Hole transit times and dispersion parameters at various
applied electric fields for the TOF measurements in this
study. The terms w/o and w/ represent the without and with,
respectively.
Observing the charge-genaration region by the power-dissipation profiles
in the TOF samples
To determine the reduced degree of dispersion when the CGL was used, we proposed
a new approach to characterize the generation width of photoexcited carriers
that is crucial for contributing to the dispersivity of the transient signal. On
the basis of the transfer matrix method as proposed by Pettersson et al.,
power-dissipation profiles enabled predicting optical-field distribution and
power dissipation in thin-film based devices84. Using the same
optical constants of the organic materials that were used in predicting the
optical conditions of OPV devices (Supplementary Figure S1), the power-dissipation profiles in the TOF
samples with different structures were calculated to investigate the dispersive
issues arising from both the sample thickness and wavelength selection. Figure 4a shows the power-dissipation profiles as a function
of layer thickness in the TOF samples composed of the 2-μm NPB
without the CGL at 355- and 532-nm wavelengths. Because of the transparency of
the NPB to 532 nm, no photocarriers can be generated. For a
wavelength of 355 nm at which the NPB features an absorption peak,
the photo-excited carriers were populated near the ITO electrode and the carrier
density decays exponentially when the film thickness increased. This prediction
showed a broad charge-generation region in a range of approximately
200 nm. Therefore, the carriers generated at a different spatial
position may contribute a dispersive transient signal, as shown in Fig. 3a, because the carriers cannot reach the Al electrode
simultaneously. Therefore, the thickness for determining the transit time
accurately of the NPB requires a thicker layer over ten times higher than the
charge-generation region, which explains why TOF samples typically have a
thickness over several micrometers57587282, in particular
the material under test which has a low absorption coefficient, thus resulting
in a broad charge-generation region2447484950535568. By contrast, employing the CGL formed by the SubPc and C70
mixture which absorbs an incident wavelength of 532 nm and provides
a well-confined charge-generation width of less than 100 nm, as
shown in Fig. 4b, achieving more non-dispersive transient
signals because the photovoltage drops abruptly as the photogenerated carriers
arrive at the Al electrode without dispersion (see Fig.
3b). This is a remarkable finding because typical CGLs based on
small-molecular materials have similar absorption properties such as a low
absorption coefficient and/or overlapped absorption band with respect to the
material under test. Therefore, the possibility of exciting both the CGL and
tested material with the same excitation wavelength may occur, as shown in Fig. 4b. An unexpected charge-generation region was
observed, and therefore, a thick sample thickness is required in previous
studies53586082. When the NPB thickness decreased to
0.3 μm, the charge-generation region almost covered the
entire film thickness (Fig. 4c), and therefore the transit
time is impossible to determine, as shown in Fig. 3c. When
a thin-layer CGL with 10 nm was used in a 0.3-μm NPB,
the charge-generation width was clearly defined within the CGL under
illumination of a 532-nm excitation, as shown in Fig. 4d.
The carriers reached the Al electrode without dispersion and the transient
signal was dominated by the distribution of density of states in the NPB, as
shown in Fig. 3d. These results suggested two issues in
the TOF measurement. One is that the thickness of materials under test do affect
the determination of the transient time and dispersivity. Secondly, the
selection of excitation source with regard to the CGL and tested material can
greatly impact on the degree of dispersion because the charge-generation profile
can be varied at different wavelengths according to the absorption of materials
under test.
Figure 4
Power-dissipation profiles inside the TOF samples.
Power-dissipation
profiles in TOF samples at illumination of 355 (black lines) and
532 nm (red lines) for a 2-μm NPB (a) without
and (b) with a 100-nm CGL, and 0.3-μm NPB (c)
without and (d) with a 10-nm CGL. The terms w/o and w/ represent the
without and with, respectively. The region of the CGL is indicated by
arrows.
Thickness-dependent hole and electron mobility
Figure 5a shows the hole mobility estimated at various film
thicknesses and excitation sources. For comparison, the mobility obtained from a
hole-only device, in a structure of ITO/MoO3 (15 nm)/NPB
(150 or 300 nm)/Au, detertemed using a SCLC model is provided (Supplementary Figure S4)4142. The 0.3-μm NPB without the CGL cannot determine
the hole mobility because of the lack of a turning point in the transient
signals, as shown in Fig. 3c. The 2-μm NPB
without using the CGL at 355-nm excitation has a compable hole mobility of 2-4 x
10−4 cm2 V−1 s−1
to previous studies57586382. When the CGL and 532-nm
excitation were used in the 2-μm NPB device, the hole mobility
becomes lower in a range of 1-2 x
10−4 cm2 V−1 s−1
and exhibited high dependence on the electric field. We attribute this
phenomenon to the confinement effect of the charge generation because of the use
of the CGL, thus leading to a longer distance the carriers require to travel in
comparison to the carriers generated with a broad carrier distribution in the
samples without the CGL. As a matter of fact, the carriers generated in the
broad distribution may overestimate the carrier mobility because the averaged
travelling distance is shorter than the case if the carriers are generated in a
sheet. The 2-μm NPB sample used the 100-nm CGL, which is
one-twentieth of the 2-μm NPB, for generating the carriers. The CGL
was the SubPc:C70 mixture, which may hinder the carrier transport at
such thick layer because of the incomplete interpenetrating network and/or short
carrier lifetime. Therefore, a CGL possessed a better carrier transport is
expected to obtain more reliable data. This can be achieved by reducing the
thickness of the CGL to increase the thickness ratio of NPB to CGL. In the TOF
sample composed of a 0.3-μm NPB with a 532-nm excitation, the
carrier mobility remains almost the same of approximately 1 x
10−4 cm2 V−1 s−1
with a slight dependence on electric field. Because the CGL was reduced to
10 nm which is one-thirtieth of the NPB layer, the photogenerated
carriers were appropriately-confined in a narrow width and can transport through
the NPB layer without being trapped in the SubPc:C70 mixture.
Although the hole mobility obtained based on the use of the CGL differed between
the devices with varous thicknesses, the values were on the order of
10−4 cm2 V−1 s−1
(Fig. 5b), thus showing a thickness-iudependent
property. By contrast, the carrier mobility estimated by the SCLC model lead to
a substantial thickness-to-thickness variation, as observed in the current study
and in previous studies414265. Therefore, the TOF measurement
with the employment of the CGL and specific excitation source is more reliable
and becomes a valuable tool in determining the carrier mobility once the sample
thickness can be reduced to a value near that used in a real device. The hole
mobility was determined because of an appropirate energy-level alignment between
the CGL and the NPB. However, the electron mobility was yet to determine becuaae
large barrier height for electron at the CGL/NPB interface may impede the
electron injection (Fig. 2b) and limits the proposed
technique to estimating the hole transport only. To address this issue, we
determined the electron mobility by applying a negative bias to ITO, thus
allowing electrons to be swept toward the Al electrode. The samples with the
10-nm CGL at 532-nm excitation showed non-dispersive properties in a wide range
of the NPB thicknesses from 2 to 1 μm (Supplementary Figure S5). The electron
transient signals showed clear turning points differentiated from the plateaus
and tail sections, defining the transit times without ambiguities (Supplementary Table S1). Figure
5c shows the electron mobility estimated from these transit signals,
together with an inset presenting the dispersion parameter as defined in
Equation 2. The electron mobility measured in the current
study was 5-8 x
10−4 cm2 V−1 s−1,
which agrees well with the value reported by Tse et al.72,
thus proving that the NPB is an ambipolar material with a higher electron
mobility than the hole moblity. In addition, the dispersion parameters for
electron were lower than 0.1 for all thicknesses and electric fields, indicating
the highly non-dispersive electron transport of the NPB. We inferred that the
high barrier for electrons at the CGL/NPB interface could be overcome by high
electric fields that promotes electron injection, thus permitting the measure of
electron transport in the NPB. Although the thickness for determining electron
mobility was limited to 1 μm, this thickness is the
thinnest value to date. We have successfully demonstrated and re-evaluated that
the TOF technique is a valuable and practical tool in determining carrier
mobility using a combination of the highly efficient OPV materials SubPc and
C70. In the near future, carrier-injection layers or structural
designs are required to reduce the TOF sample thickness to achieve the
real-device thickness.
Figure 5
Thickness and electric-field dependence of carrier mobility.
(a) Hole mobility measured with different configurations in the
current study compared with the values obtained by the SCLC model on the
basis of hole-only devices. (b) Hole mobility at various NPB
thicknesses measured using the TOF measurement with a CGL. (c)
Electron mobility at various NPB thicknesses measured using the TOF
measurement with a CGL. The inset shows electron dispersion parameters as a
function of applied electric fields for the TOF samples with various
thicknesses of the NPB. The terms w/o and w/ represent the without and with,
respectively.
Flexibility of the proposed CGL
The discussed devices were placed the proposed CGL underneath the material under
test. This approach may limit to the samples prepared by thermal evaporation.
For example, polymers are mostly spun-coated onto substrates and thus may
dissolve CGLs that are already deposited on the substrates. Therefore, we
proposed that another advantage of using the proposed CGL is the flexibility of
the fabrication process (i.e., the thermal-evaporated CGL). For measuring the
carrier mobility of polymers, the discussed structure can be altered to
ITO/polymer/CGL/Al to resolve the dissolving problem. To demonstrate this idea,
a structure of ITO/NPB (0.3 μm)/CGL
(10 nm)/Al was fabricated for comparison with ITO/CGL
(10 nm)/NPB (0.3 μm)/Al. Because the CGL is
on the top of the NPB, the measurement setup is different from the case in which
a CGL is underneath the NPB (Supplementary
Figure S6). Figure 6 compares the results
obtained from both the CGL/NPB and NPB/CGL structures. The hole and electron
mobility were mostly identical for both device structures, thus indicating that
in the thermal-evaporation system the CGL can place underneath and atop
materials of interest, both of which showed an accurate measure of the carrier
mobility. Therefore, for measuring the carrier mobility of polymers, the
proposed CGL can be deposited on polymers that were already spun-coated onto the
substrates without concerning the dissolving problem. To demonstrate the
possibility of confining the charge-generation width by using the proposed CGL
for measuring the carrier mobility of polymers that were used in OPV devices, we
choose three commonly used polymers,
poly[(R)-3-(4-(4-ethyl-2-oxazolin-2-yl)phenyl)thiophene] (PEOPT)85, poly(3-hexylthiophene-2,5-diyl) (P3HT)86, and
[6,6]-phenyl-C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM)87 as a standard
reference. The structure of TOF sample was ITO/polymers/CGL/Ag, in which the Ag
must be transparent (the thickness is typically 10-20 nm) for the
light passing through the Ag to excite CGLs88. The calculated
power-dissipation profiles were shown in the Figure S7 in the Supplementary Information. The measurement
configuration for measuring the polymers are provided (Supplementary Information Figure S7). To
simulate a real case, the thicknesses of the polymers were fixed at
100 nm and that of the CGL was fixed at 5 nm. Because
PEOPT and P3HT absorb the wavelength of 532 nm, exciting the CGL
with a 355-nm excitation is preferable. The transient signals may be primarily
contributed by the carriers in the CGL because the power dissipation in the CGL
was much higher than that in the polymers. However, for the PCBM, which has a
high absorption in a wavelength of 355 nm, a 532-nm excitation will
be more appropriate to excite the CGL and the transient signals were primarily
contributed by the carriers in the CGL. Although the charge generation may occur
in the polymers, most of the carriers were generated in the CGL and contributes
to the transient signals, thus leading to a more accurate carrier mobility. In
the state of the art, a series of novel polymers was synthesized toward the
near-infrared (NIR) absorption for extending the spectral coverage over the
solar spectrum18899091929394. The polymers were the
so called low-bandgap polymers which having absorption within an NIR wavelength
range. In addition, the proposed CGL has high extinction coefficient than that
of these polymers, especially when these polymers were in a blend with the PCBM.
Although the proposed CGL cannot completely confine the charge-generation width
in the polymers, the CGL can contribute most of the carriers to dominate the
transient signals without overestimating the carrier mobility of the polymers
because of a broad width of charge generation.
Figure 6
Comparison of CGLs deposited underneath and atop the NPB.
Hole and
electron mobility obtained from the various device structures with
depositing CGLs underneath and atop NPB layer. The open circles and dashed
lines indicate the hole mobility of the NPB. The solid circles and lines
indicate the electron mobility of the NPB. The inset depicts CGL/NPB and
NPB/CGL structures. In the inset, the open and solid symbol denote the hole
and electron, respectively.
Discussion
The TOF measurement is widely used to evaluate the carrier mobility of organic
materials over the last decade. To obtain a plateau and an abrupt drop of the
transient signal, the sample thicknesses were typically several micrometers.
However, in practical electronic devices the thickness is between tens to hundreds
nm, or sub-micrometers. The requirement of a thick TOF sample is primary due to an
unwell-confined charge-generation width. This requirement could have resulted in
overestimating carrier mobility because the travelling distance of carriers is not
equivalent to the thickness of materials under test, especially parts of carriers
travel a shorter distance. Although the concept and the use of a CGL for confining
the charge-generation width is not new, concerning that both small-molecule and
polymeric CGLs have been reported245960, the proposed CGL is
advantageous over those reported CGLs. For example, the reported small-molecule CGLs
have a wide band gap and thereby absorb a wavelength of 355 nm
substantially. However, the high energy of the 355-nm wavelength may excite the
excitons in the materials under test simultaneously, thus rendering the estimation
of the carrier mobility inaccurate. The proposed CGL has considerably high quantum
efficiency, such as absorption, IQE, and EQE, in a wavelength range of 500 to
600 nm. The excitation source can be changed from 355 to
532 nm, both of which are unlikely to be absorbed by most materials that
were used in OLEDs. To measure materials that were used in OPV devices, the proposed
optical-simulation approach is valuable for estimating the charge-generation profile
in devices under test. Therefore, the charge-generation width can be well controlled
for obtaining a non-dispersive transient signal and determines the carrier mobility
accurately. In addition, the proposed CGL composed of a blend of a donor and an
acceptor on the basis of a bulk heterojunction. Therefore, both holes and electrons
can be generated to materials under test for measuring the hole and electron
mobility. These results demonstrated the applicability of using OPV materials to be
an effective CGL in the TOF measurement. Furthermore, these results also presented a
new application of OPV devices in addition to light harvesting.In the current study, the TOF samples with two NPB thicknesses were compared. To
avoid the unnecessary voltage drop across the CGL, the thickness ratios of the NPB
to the CGL were 20:1 and 30:1 for the 2-μm and 0.3-μm NPB,
respectively. However, the ratios were not necessarily a reflection of reducing the
CGL thickness when a thinner NPB thickness was used. To address this issue, the CGL
thicknesses of 5, 10, and 15 nm were used in the TOF samples with a
0.3-μm NPB. The transient signals of the samples under 532-nm
illumination showed almost unchanged profiles and identical hole mobility (Supplementary Figure S8). This result
indicates that the 5-nm CGL enabled measuring a thinner thickness of the TOF
samples. In previous studies, some unexpected doping effect such as oxygen or
intrinsic dispersivity may negatively affect the transient signal, resulting in a
dispersive transient signal and cannot determine the transient time accurately. The
advantage of using CGLs was for confining the charge-generation width to determine
the transient time accurately. Therefore, the proposed approach of using the OPVCGL
may not be a solution to overcome this doping issue. A possibility to resolve this
problem is to directly remove the impurities which form defects and influence the
carrier transport through the purification of materials under test (Supplementary Figure S9). In addition, the
aforementioned result suggested that the proposed CGL is applicable for determining
the carrier mobility of polymers. To demonstrate the possibility, a P3HT-based TOF
sample with a 5-nm CGL was fabricated and tested. The different illuminating
direction was also conducted for proving the accuracy. Although the
P3HT/SubPc:C70 unintentionally gave rise to a P3HT/C70
bilayer OPV structure, the hole mobility showed consistent results independent of
the illuminating direction (Supplementary
Figure S10).In summary, we used OPV materials, SubPc and C70, that having a high PCE
of up to 6% in an OPV configuration, to be an efficient CGL for the TOF measurement.
By comparing the NPB-based TOF samples without and with the CGL under 355- and
532-nm photoexcitation, respectively, the transient signals at various applied
electric fields become more non-dispersive, and therefore the transit time can be
determined accurately, as reflected by the reduced degree of dispersion parameter.
In the observations of the power-dissipation profiles in the TOF samples, the
reduced dispersivity was attributed to the use of a specific excition wavelength of
532 nm which is transparent to the NPB while highly absorbed by the CGL,
thus permitting a well-defined width for charge generation. Combined with the use of
the CGL and the selected excitation source, the thickness of the TOF samples for
determining the hole and electron mobility of the NPB can be reduced down to 0.3 and
1 μm, respectively, both of which are the thinnest sample
thickness reported to date. Our findings provided not only a novel design rule to
prepare the TOF samples with a thickness approaching the thickness that was used in
a real device, but also presented a prospective use of photovoltaic materials to be
an efficient CGL for obtaining a more reliable data for the TOF measurement in
determining the carrier behavior of typical transporting materials with a wide band
gap. In addition, the fabrication flexibility of the proposed CGL (i.e., the
thermal-evaporated process enables fabricating the CGL underneath or atop the
material under test) was not limited to measure the carrier mobility of small
molecules but also polymers by simply changing the sample preparation method.
Methods
Materials and Device Fabrications
All materials, MoO3, SubPc, C70, BCP, NPB, Al were
purchased from Sigma-Aldrich. The SubPc was purified twice prior to use, whereas
the rest of the organic materials were used as received. ITO-coated glass
substrates were cleaned with ultrasonic bath in solutions (detergent, deionized
water, acetone, isopropanol) without further surface treatment, either for OPV
devices or TOF samples. The thin film deposition was conducted in a high-vacuum
chamber
(<8 × 10−6 Torr).
The deposition rates and film thicknesses were monitored during the deposition
using a deposition controller (Sycon Instruments XTM-2XM) with a quartz crystal
microbalance. The film thickness of each layer was measured using a surface
profiler (Veeco Tektak 3) and an ellipsometry (Raditech SE-950). The deposition
rate of each layer in the OPV devices was controlled at approximately
0.1 nm/s. To form a SubPc:C70 mixture in a volume ratio
of 1:5, the deposition rates of the SubPc and C70 were independently
controlled to approximately 0.04 and 0.20 nm/s, respectively. For
the TOF samples, NPB layers were deposited at 0.3-0.5 nm/s, for both
2 and 0.3 μm. The deposition of Al cathode through a
shadow mask defined the active area of 0.04 cm2 for
both the OPV devices and TOF samples. After the cathode deposition, the devices
were appropriately encapsulated using an UV-curable epoxy resin (Everwide
Chemical Co. Ltd. EXC345) and a getter-attached cover glass for preventing the
organic layers from the ambient environment. A home-made in-situ
and independently controlled shutter system in which each shutter can be
individually controlled was used to fabricate the devices with various
structures in one run without breaking the vacuum, thus preventing the deviation
between the production runs. A home-designed layout on the ITO substrates
enabled producing five devices on one substrate. A total number of fifteen
devices were fabricated simultaneously on three different substrates.
OPV Devices Characterizations
All characterizations were performed in the air. J-V
characteristics were measured using a source meter (Keithley 2636A). Photo
J-V characteristics were performed under AM 1.5G solar
illumination (Newport 91160A) at
100 mW cm−2 which was
measured using a silicon reference cell (PV measurement; area:
3.981 cm2). The EQE spectra were determined using
a monochromator (Newport 74100) for generating monochromatic light in a
wavelength range of 400 to 800 nm and a lock-in amplifier (Stanford
Research Systems SR830) chopped at 250 Hz for recording the
photocurrent from the OPV devices.
Materials Characterizations
HOMO levels and work functions of thin films were evaluated from high-energy
onset points in a spectrum measured using a photoelectron spectrometer (Riken
Keiki AC-2). Energy gaps were derived from the absorption spectra by the
high-wavelength onset points recorded using a UV-visible spectrophotometer
(Thermo Scientific Evolution 220) for estimating LUMO levels of the organic
materials. Optical constants, refractive indices and extinction coefficients,
were determined using the ellipsometry that was used in the measurement of film
thickness. EL spectra of laser emission were measured using a spectrometer
(Ocean Optics USB2000+).
TOF Measurements
An Nd:YAG pulsed laser (Spectra-Physics Quanta-Ray INDI-40-10) with second and
third harmonic wavelengths, 355 and 532 nm, respectively, were used
as excitation sources. The pulse width was in a range of 6-9 ns. The power of
355- and 532-nm laser was approximately 20-30 mW measured using a
power meter (Scientech AC2501). The laser beam diameter was approximately
10 mm, which covered the entire area of the TOF samples. The source
meter that was used in characterizing OPV devices provided the electric field
across the TOF samples for driving photo-excited carriers. The transient signals
were recorded using a 2.5 GHz oscilloscope (LeCroy WaveRunner 625Zi)
triggered synchronously with the Q-switch Nd:YAG laser. For the NPB TOF samples,
all excitation illuminated through the ITO side. For polymer TOF samples, the
excitation illuminated from both ITO and Ag sides.
Author Contributions
S.-W.L. and C.-C.L. contributed equally to this work. S.-W.L. and C.-C.L. provided
the idea of this research and wrote this paper. W.-C.S. and C.-H.Y. measured the TOF
samples and analyzed the data. C.-F.L., K.-T.C. and Y.-S.S. fabricated the TOF
samples. Y.-Z.L., T.-H.S. and Y.-H.L. summarized the references and provide the
information about writing this paper. B.-Y.H. and W.-C.C. developed the
high-performance OPV devices.
Additional Information
How to cite this article: Liu, S.-W. et al. Downscaling the Sample
Thickness to Sub-Micrometers by Employing Organic Photovoltaic Materials as a
Charge-Generation Layer in the Time-of-Flight Measurement. Sci. Rep.
5, 10384; doi: 10.1038/srep10384 (2015).
Authors: Letian Dou; Jing Gao; Eric Richard; Jingbi You; Chun-Chao Chen; Kitty C Cha; Youjun He; Gang Li; Yang Yang Journal: J Am Chem Soc Date: 2012-06-06 Impact factor: 15.419
Authors: Jingbi You; Chun-Chao Chen; Letian Dou; Seiichiro Murase; Hsin-Sheng Duan; Steven A Hawks; Tao Xu; Hae Jung Son; Luping Yu; Gang Li; Yang Yang Journal: Adv Mater Date: 2012-07-26 Impact factor: 30.849