| Literature DB >> 33398117 |
Zhiming Liang1, Hyun Ho Choi2, Xuyi Luo3, Tuo Liu1, Ashkan Abtahi1,4, Uma Shantini Ramasamy1,5, J Andrew Hitron6, Kyle N Baustert1, Jacob L Hempel4, Alex M Boehm1, Armin Ansary4, Douglas R Strachan4, Jianguo Mei3, Chad Risko1,5, Vitaly Podzorov2, Kenneth R Graham7.
Abstract
It is commonly assumed that charge-carrier transport in doped π-conjugated polymers is dominated by one type of charge carrier, either holes or electrons, as determined by the chemistry of the dopant. Here, through Seebeck coefficient and Hall effect measurements, we show that mobile electrons contribute substantially to charge-carrier transport in π-conjugated polymers that are heavily p-doped with strong electron acceptors. Specifically, the Seebeck coefficient of several p-doped polymers changes sign from positive to negative as the concentration of the oxidizing agents FeCl3 or NOBF4 increase, and Hall effect measurements for the same p-doped polymers reveal that electrons become the dominant delocalized charge carriers. Ultraviolet and inverse photoelectron spectroscopy measurements show that doping with oxidizing agents results in elimination of the transport gap at high doping concentrations. This approach of heavy p-type doping is demonstrated to provide a promising route to high-performance n-type organic thermoelectric materials.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33398117 DOI: 10.1038/s41563-020-00859-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Mater ISSN: 1476-1122 Impact factor: 43.841