Abstract
Carrier transport in organic semiconductors (OSCs) plays an essential role in device performance. OSCs are generally divided into hole-transporting (p-type) and electron-transporting (n-type) materials. The holes should transport in the HOMO energy level, and electrons should transport in the LUMO. Such simple model analysis would easily lead to the primary theoretical result that intrinsic bipolar transport should be a basic characteristic of OSCs. Five widely used hole-transporting materials were utilized for fabricating the corresponding hole-only and electron-only diodes. The results show that the five OSCs are all bipolar transporting materials with hole and electron mobility data in 1 order of magnitude. Considering the simple two electrode structure and that there are not any additional electrode modifications, the data in these experiments should be the real intrinsic bipolar transport characteristic in OSCs. In addition, the experimental mobility versus electric field (μ ∼E1/2) curves also showed that there were positive or negative slopes for mobilities of holes or electrons, which leads to further development of the bipolar transport model; it is believed that there is a third kind of traps in the HOMO and LUMO energy spaces, which should possess different work mechanism during the external electric field, and thus result in negative or positive slopes for μ ∼E1/2.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 18264-18269 |
Number of pages | 6 |
Journal | Journal of Physical Chemistry C |
Volume | 123 |
Issue number | 30 |
DOIs | |
State | Published - Aug 2019 |
Externally published | Yes |