Correlating Nanostructure and Electronic Properties of Organic Semiconductors by Electron Microscopy
Licentiate thesis, 2022

Organic semiconductors enable fabrication and efficient processing of electronic devices with light weight, mechanical flexibility and tuneable properties. Despite significant progress in the last decades, efficiencies and long-term stabilities of these systems still need to be improved. The properties of organic semiconductors have been shown to be correlated to their morphology. In this thesis work, the nanostructures of organic semiconductors are studied using electron microscopy. Aggregation characteristics, morphology of the phases and the detailed structure of the interfaces have been studied using transmission electron microscopy with both imaging and spectroscopy. It is shown how these structural properties determine the electronic properties. Electron tomography is used to visualise the three-dimensional distribution of dopant molecules in an organic semiconductor at sub-nanometre resolution, which enables the determination of positions of individual molecules. Both individual dopants and clusters are observed. The clusters grow in size and change shape as the dopant concentration increases. This change affects the conductivity which initially increases with increasing concentration and thereafter decreases. The three-dimensional information about the dopant positions in the clusters show that the cluster morphology allow that each dopant molecule is in direct contact with the surrounding polymer. The changes in morphology of the dopant clusters can explain the decrease in electrical conductivity at the higher dopant levels. The work in this thesis provides detailed nanostructure information that is important for the understanding of fundamental mechanisms in organic semiconductors.

3D

transmission electron microscopy

clustering

molecular dopant

nanostructure

structure-property correlation

visualisation

concentration

organic semiconductor

PJ-salen, Kemigården 1
Opponent: Prof. Ergang Wang, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden

Author

Gustav Persson

Chalmers, Physics, Nano and Biophysics

Ground-state electron transfer in all-polymer donor-acceptor heterojunctions

Nature Materials,; Vol. 19(2020)p. 738-744

Journal article

Persson G., Järsvall E., Röding M., Zhang Y., Barlow S., Marder S., Müller C., Olsson E. Visualisation of individual dopant molecules in organic electronics: sub-nanometre 3D distribution and correlation to electronic properties

Next Generation Organic Solar Cells (OPV 2.0)

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2016-06146), 2017-01-01 -- 2022-12-31.

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2016-06146), 2017-01-01 -- 2022-12-31.

Swedish Research Council (VR) (2016-06146), 2017-01-01 -- 2022-12-31.

Areas of Advance

Nanoscience and Nanotechnology

Energy

Subject Categories

Polymer Technologies

Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Energy Systems

Infrastructure

Chalmers Materials Analysis Laboratory

Publisher

Chalmers

PJ-salen, Kemigården 1

Opponent: Prof. Ergang Wang, Department of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Chalmers University of Technology, Sweden

More information

Latest update

4/5/2022 6