Incorporation of cobaltocene as an n-dopant in organic molecular films

Author(s)
Chan, Calvin K.
Kahn, Antoine
Zhang, Qing
Barlow, Stephen
Advisor(s)
Editor(s)
Associated Organization(s)
Series
Supplementary to:
Abstract
Electrical or chemical doping of molecular films is an efficient means of improving and controlling charge injection and carrier transport in organic devices. Recent work demonstrated that bis(cyclopentadienyl)cobalt(II) (cobaltocene, CoCp₂) efficiently dopes a tris(thieno)hexaazatriphenylene (THAP) derivative, as shown by a 0.56 eV shift of the Fermi level toward the empty states and an increase of current density by a factor of 10³ over undoped THAP devices. In this work, a combination of x-ray photoemission spectroscopy and Rutherford backscattering is used to elucidate the details of dopant incorporation into bulk films. Cobaltocene is observed to codeposit into the THAP matrix in a controllable manner, with preferential adsorption of the dopant onto the surface of the host film. In the case of CoCp₂-doped tris(8-hydroxy-quinolinato) aluminum (Alq₃) films, negligible amounts of the dopant are found in the bulk matrix and on the film surface, resulting in minimal improvements in the electrical characteristics of doped Alq₃ films. The process of CoCp₂ adsorption onto a film surface or the evolving surface of a growing film which leads to dopant incorporation is likely assisted by charge transfer from cobaltocene to the host material, resulting in ion pairing between the dopant and host.
Sponsor
Date
2007-07-01
Extent
Resource Type
Text
Resource Subtype
Article
Rights Statement
Rights URI