Dimensionality-tailored pure organic semiconductor with high hole mobility for low-dose x-ray imaging

  • Jiahao Geng
  • , Donghao Ma
  • , Meng Xu
  • , Zhihui Gao
  • , Long Zhou
  • , Zixuan Jia
  • , Mengyao Liu
  • , Zhiyu Zheng
  • , Wei Zheng
  • , Huaiyu Zhang
  • , Xinkai Peng
  • , Chen Li
  • , Dou Zhao
  • , Wanqi Jie
  • , Yadong Xu

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Pure-organic semiconductors have attracted broad interest in tissue-equivalent and biocompatible X-ray sensors, while their low-dose X-ray imaging capability still suffers from poor charge transport properties. Here, we report a dimensionality tailoring method to enhance hole transport in pure-organic semiconductors, enabling highly stable and low-dose X-ray detection and imaging without toxic elements such as Pb or Hg. By substituting the -CN group in 4-hydroxycyanobenzene (4HCB, HO-C6H4-CN) with a -COOCH3 group, we transform the two-dimensional (2D) structure into a three-dimensional (3D) 4-methyl hydroxybenzoate (4MHB, HO-C6H4-COOCH3) crystal featuring enhanced intermolecular π-π stacking. This structural reconfiguration yields a high hole mobility of 19.91 cm2 V−1 s−1 and an ultralow dark current drift of 1.14 × 10−10nA cm−1 s−1 V−1 at 100 V mm−1. The superior charge transport facilitated by stronger π-π interactions enables stable X-ray detection with a detection limit as low as 4.22 nGyair s−1 and high-resolution imaging at 1.6 lp mm−1 under low-dose irradiation (58.76 μGyair s−1). This work demonstrates a molecular tailoring strategy to modulate the structural dimensionality and the charge transport path of pure-organic semiconductors, advancing tissue-equivalence and biocompatible X-ray imagers toward high-resolution and low-dose operation.

Original languageEnglish
Article number10369
JournalNature Communications
Volume16
Issue number1
DOIs
StatePublished - Dec 2025

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