Organic/Organic′ Heterojunctions: Organic Light Emitting Diodes and Organic Photovoltaic Devices
- 19 May 2009
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Macromolecular Rapid Communications
- Vol. 30 (9-10) , 717-731
- https://doi.org/10.1002/marc.200900075
Abstract
Heterojunctions created from thin films of two dissimilar organic semiconductor materials [organic/organic′ (O/O′) heterojunctions] are an essential component of organic light emitting diode displays and lighting systems (OLEDs, PLEDs) and small molecule or polymer‐based organic photovoltaic (solar cell) technologies (OPVs). O/O′ heterojunctions are the site for exciton formation in OLEDs, and the site for exciton dissociation and photocurrent production in OPVs. Frontier orbital energy offsets in O/O′ heterojunctions establish the excess free energy controlling rates of charge recombination and formation of emissive states in OLEDs and PLEDs. These energy offsets also establish the excess free energy which controls charge separation and the short‐circuit photocurrent (JSC) in OPVs, and set the upper limit for the open‐circuit photopotential (VOC). We review here how these frontier orbital energy offsets are determined using photoemission spectroscopies, how these energies change as a function of molecular environment, and the influence of interface dipoles on these frontier orbital energies. Recent examples of heterojunctions based on small molecule materials are shown, emphasizing those heterojunctions which are of interest for photovoltaic applications. These include heterojunctions of perylenebisimide dyes with trivalent metal phthalocyanines, and heterojunctions of titanyl phthalocyanine with C60, and with pentacene. Organic solar cells comprised of donor/acceptor pairs of each of these last three materials confirm that the VOC scales with the energy offsets between the HOMO of the donor and LUMO of the acceptor ($E_{{\rm HOMO}^{\rm D} } - E_{{\rm LUMO}^{\rm A} }$ ). magnified imageKeywords
This publication has 233 references indexed in Scilit:
- Decamethylcobaltocene as an efficient n-dopant in organic electronic materials and devicesOrganic Electronics, 2008
- Nanographenes as Active Components of Single-Molecule Electronics and How a Scanning Tunneling Microscope Puts Them To WorkAccounts of Chemical Research, 2008
- Control of molecular orientation of organic p–i–n structures by using molecular templating effect at heterointerfacesOrganic Electronics, 2007
- Growth of an Ordered Crystalline Organic HeterojunctionAdvanced Materials, 2007
- Analysis of improved photovoltaic properties of pentacene/C60 organic solar cells: Effects of exciton blocking layer thickness and thermal annealingSolid-State Electronics, 2007
- Ultraviolet light–ozone treatment of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxy-thiophene)-based materials resulting in increased work functionsThin Solid Films, 2006
- Photovoltaic cells from a soluble pentacene derivativeOrganic Electronics, 2006
- Absolute Energies of Interconverting Contact and Solvent-Separated Radical−Ion PairsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 1996
- Ordered Ultrathin Films of Perylenetetracarboxylic Dianhydride (PTCDA) and Dimethylperylenebis(dicarboximide) (Me-PTCDI) on Cu(100): Characterization of Structure and Surface Stoichiometry by LEED, TDMS, and XPSThe Journal of Physical Chemistry, 1995
- Electron transfers in chemistry and biologyBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Reviews on Bioenergetics, 1985