| Literature DB >> 34732866 |
Han Guo1, Chi-Yuan Yang2, Xianhe Zhang1, Alessandro Motta3, Kui Feng1, Yu Xia4, Yongqiang Shi1, Ziang Wu5, Kun Yang1, Jianhua Chen1, Qiaogan Liao1, Yumin Tang1, Huiliang Sun1, Han Young Woo5, Simone Fabiano2, Antonio Facchetti6,7,8, Xugang Guo9.
Abstract
Chemical doping is a key process for investigating charge transport in organic semiconductors and improving certain (opto)electronic devices1-9. N(electron)-doping is fundamentally more challenging than p(hole)-doping and typically achieves a very low doping efficiency (η) of less than 10%1,10. An efficient molecular n-dopant should simultaneously exhibit a high reducing power and air stability for broad applicability1,5,6,9,11, which is very challenging. Here we show a general concept of catalysed n-doping of organic semiconductors using air-stable precursor-type molecular dopants. Incorporation of a transition metal (for example, Pt, Au, Pd) as vapour-deposited nanoparticles or solution-processable organometallic complexes (for example, Pd2(dba)3) catalyses the reaction, as assessed by experimental and theoretical evidence, enabling greatly increased η in a much shorter doping time and high electrical conductivities (above 100 S cm-1; ref. 12). This methodology has technological implications for realizing improved semiconductor devices and offers a broad exploration space of ternary systems comprising catalysts, molecular dopants and semiconductors, thus opening new opportunities in n-doping research and applications12, 13.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34732866 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-021-03942-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nature ISSN: 0028-0836 Impact factor: 49.962