| Literature DB >> 29387522 |
Katelyn P Goetz1, Jun'ya Tsutsumi2, Sujitra Pookpanratana3, Jihua Chen4, Nathan S Corbin5, Rakesh K Behera5, Veaceslav Coropceanu5, Curt A Richter3, Christina A Hacker3, Tatsuo Hasegawa2, Oana D Jurchescu1.
Abstract
The organic charge-transfer (CT) complex dibenzotetrathiafulvalene - 7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane (DBTTF-TCNQ) is found to crystallize in two polymorphs when grown by physical vapor transport: the known α-polymorph and a new structure, the β-polymorph. Structural and elemental analysis via selected area electron diffraction (SAED), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and polarized IR spectroscopy reveal that the complexes have the same stoichiometry with a 1:1 donor:acceptor ratio, but exhibit unique unit cells. The structural variations result in significant differences in the optoelectronic properties of the crystals, as observed in our experiments and electronic-structure calculations. Raman spectroscopy shows that the α-polymorph has a degree of charge transfer of about 0.5e, while the β-polymorph is nearly neutral. Organic field-effect transistors fabricated on these crystals reveal that in the same device structure both polymorphs show ambipolar charge transport, but the α-polymorph exhibits electron-dominant transport while the β-polymorph is hole-dominant. Together, these measurements imply that the transport features result from differing donor-acceptor overlap and consequential varying in frontier molecular orbital mixing, as suggested theoretically for charge-transfer complexes.Entities:
Keywords: Organic Electronics; charge-transfer complexes; organic semiconductors; polymorphism; single crystals
Year: 2016 PMID: 29387522 PMCID: PMC5788010 DOI: 10.1002/aelm.201600203
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adv Electron Mater Impact factor: 7.295