Alberto Salleo

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Name: Salleo, Alberto
Organization: Stanford University , USA
Department: Department of Materials Science and Engineering
Title: Associate(PhD)

TOPICS

Co-reporter:Annabel R. Chew, Raja Ghosh, Zhengrong Shang, Frank C. Spano, and Alberto Salleo
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters October 19, 2017 Volume 8(Issue 20) pp:4974-4974
Publication Date(Web):September 26, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acs.jpclett.7b01989
Sequential doping is a promising new doping technique for semicrystalline polymers that has been shown to produce doped films with higher conductivity and more uniform morphology than conventional doping processes, and where the dopant placement in the film can be controlled. As a relatively new technique, however, much work is needed to understand the resulting polymer–dopant interactions upon sequential doping. A combination of infrared spectroscopy and theoretical simulations shows that the dopants selectively placed in the amorphous regions in the film via sequential doping result in highly localized polarons. We find that the presence of dopants within the amorphous regions of the film leads to an increase in conjugation length of the amorphous chains upon doping, increasing film connectivity and hence improving the overall conductivity of the film compared with the conventional doping processes.
Co-reporter:Francesca Santoro, Yoeri van de Burgt, Scott Tom Keene, Bianxiao Cui, and Alberto Salleo
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces November 15, 2017 Volume 9(Issue 45) pp:39116-39116
Publication Date(Web):October 30, 2017
DOI:10.1021/acsami.7b12308
Interfacing soft materials with biological systems holds considerable promise for both biosensors and recording live cells. However, the interface between cells and organic substrates is not well studied, despite its crucial role in the effectiveness of the device. Furthermore, well-known cell adhesion enhancers, such as microgrooves, have not been implemented on these surfaces. Here, we present a nanoscale characterization of the cell–substrate interface for 3D laser-patterned organic electrodes by combining electrochemical impedance spectroscopy (EIS) and scanning electron microscopy/focused ion beam (SEM/FIB). We demonstrate that introducing 3D micropatterned grooves on organic surfaces enhances the cell adhesion of electrogenic cells.Keywords: biointerface; electrochemical impedance spectroscopy; femtosecond laser; organic bioelectronics; PEDOT:PSS; scanning electron microscopy/focused ion beam;
Co-reporter:Jesus O. Guardado
Advanced Functional Materials 2017 Volume 27(Issue 32) pp:
Publication Date(Web):2017/08/01
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201701791
Ionic liquids are increasingly employed as dielectrics to generate high charge densities and enable low-voltage operation with organic semiconductors. However, effects on structure and morphology of the active material are not fully known, particularly for permeable semiconductors such as conjugated polymers, in which ions from the ionic liquid can enter and electrochemically dope the semicrystalline film. To understand when ions enter, where they go, and how they affect the film, thin films of the archetypal semiconducting polymer, poly(3-hexylthiophene), are electrochemically doped with 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl)imide, the archetypal ionic liquid. High-resolution, ex situ X-ray diffraction measurements and complete pole figures reveal changes with applied voltage, cycling, and frequency in lattice spacing, crystallite orientation, and crystallinity in the bulk and at the buried interface. Dopant ions penetrate the film and enter the crystallites at sufficiently high voltages and low frequencies. Upon infiltrating crystallites, ions permanently expand lamellar stacking and contract pi-stacking. Cycling amplifies these effects, but higher frequencies mitigate the expansion of bulk crystallites as ions are hindered from entering crystallites. This mechanistic understanding of the structural effects of ion penetration will help develop models of the frequency and voltage impedance response of electrochemically doped conjugated polymers and advance electronic applications.
Co-reporter:Saahil Mehra, Amy Bergerud, Delia J. Milliron, Emory M. Chan, and Alberto Salleo
Chemistry of Materials 2016 Volume 28(Issue 10) pp:3454
Publication Date(Web):May 3, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acs.chemmater.6b00981
Tunable aliovalent doping is critical to controlling the optoelectronic properties of semiconductor nanocrystal systems. However, unintentional dopant-induced shape evolution and kinetically limited doping reactions in low-temperature nanocrystal syntheses make it difficult to independently control shape and incorporate dopants in colloidal metal oxide nanocrystals. Here, we demonstrate a synthetic strategy for achieving simultaneous control of both nanorod shape and dopant concentration in colloidal zinc oxide nanorods. We show that this approach succeeds in doping zinc oxide nanorods using Group III dopants (indium or aluminum) in varying concentrations, and we quantify the effects of dopant incorporation on the structural, optical, and plasmonic properties of the nanorods. The synthesis of undoped zinc oxide nanorod templates and subsequent addition of dopant salts to the ongoing reaction enables both shape retention and dopant incorporation. Subsequent growth of an undoped shell on the nanorods incorporates surface segregated dopants with high efficiency. This “core/shell” doping strategy presents a general route to achieving controlled dopant incorporation and morphological retention in anisotropic metal oxide nanocrystal systems.
Co-reporter:Michael D. Wisser, Stefan Fischer, Peter C. Maurer, Noah D. Bronstein, Steven Chu, A. Paul Alivisatos, Alberto Salleo, and Jennifer A. Dionne
ACS Photonics 2016 Volume 3(Issue 8) pp:1523
Publication Date(Web):July 22, 2016
DOI:10.1021/acsphotonics.6b00166
Lanthanide-based upconverting nanoparticles exhibit significant promise for solar energy generation, biological imaging, and security technologies but have not seen widespread adoption due to the prohibitively low efficiencies of current materials. Weak transition dipole moments between 4f orbitals hinder both photon absorption and emission. Here, we introduce a novel way to increase the radiative transition rates in Yb,Er-based upconverting nanoparticles based on local symmetry distortion. Beginning from a host matrix of the well-studied hexagonal (β)-phase NaYF4, we incrementally remove Y3+ ions and cosubstitute for them a 1:1 mixture of Gd3+ and Lu3+. These two ions act to expand and contract the lattice, respectively, inducing local-level distortion while maintaining the average host structure. We synthesize a range of β-NaY0.8–2xGdxLuxF4:Yb0.18Er0.02 nanoparticles and experimentally confirm that particle size, phase, global structure, and Yb3+ and Er3+ concentrations remain constant as x is varied. Upconversion quantum yield is probed as the degree of cosubstitution is varied from x = 0 to x = 0.24. We achieve a maximum quantum yield value of 0.074% under 63 W/cm2 of excitation power density, representing a 1.6× enhancement over the unmodified particles and the highest measured value for near-infrared-to-visible upconversion in sub-25 nm unshelled nanoparticles. We also investigate upconversion emission at the single-particle level and report record improvements in emission intensity for sub-50 nm particles. Radiative rate enhancements are confirmed by measuring excited-state lifetimes. The approach described herein can be used in combination with more established methods of efficiency improvement, such as adding passivating shells or coupling to plasmonic nanoattenas, to further boost the upconversion quantum yield.Keywords: crystal symmetry; lanthanides; optical selection rules; quantum yield; radiative rate; upconversion
Co-reporter:Feng Gao;Scott Himmelberger;Mattias Andersson;David Hanifi;Yuxin Xia;Shaoqing Zhang;Jianpu Wang;Jianhui Hou;Olle Inganäs
Advanced Materials 2015 Volume 27( Issue 26) pp:3868-3873
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.201405913
Co-reporter:Sonya A. Mollinger;Koen Vewal
Advanced Energy Materials 2015 Volume 5( Issue 23) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/aenm.201501335

Organic ternary heterojunction photovoltaic blends are sometimes observed to undergo a gradual evolution in open-circuit voltage (Voc) with increasing amounts of a second donor or an acceptor. The Voc is strongly correlated with the energy of the charge transfer state in the blend, but this value depends on both local and mesoscopic orders. In this work, the behavior of Voc in the presence of a wide range of interfacial electronic states is investigated. The key charge transfer state interfaces responsible for Voc in several model systems with varying morphology are identified. Systems consisting of one donor with two fullerene molecules and of one acceptor with a donor polymer of varying regio-regularity are used. The effects from the changing energetic disorder in the material and from the variation due to a law of simple mixtures are quantified. It has been found that populating the higher-energy charge transfer states is not responsible for the observed change in Voc upon the addition of a third component. Aggregating polymers and miscible fullerenes are compared, and it has been concluded that in both cases charge delocalization, aggregation, and local polarization effects shift the lowest-energy charge transfer state distribution.

Co-reporter:Michael D. Wisser, Maverick Chea, Yu Lin, Di M. Wu, Wendy L. Mao, Alberto Salleo, and Jennifer A. Dionne
Nano Letters 2015 Volume 15(Issue 3) pp:1891-1897
Publication Date(Web):February 3, 2015
DOI:10.1021/nl504738k
NaYF4:Yb3+,Er3+ nanoparticle upconverters are hindered by low quantum efficiencies arising in large part from the parity-forbidden nature of their optical transitions and the nonoptimal spatial separations between lanthanide ions. Here, we use pressure-induced lattice distortion to systematically modify both parameters. Although hexagonal-phase nanoparticles exhibit a monotonic decrease in upconversion emission, cubic-phase particles experience a nearly 2-fold increase in efficiency. In-situ X-ray diffraction indicates that these emission changes require only a 1% reduction in lattice constant. Our work highlights the intricate relationship between upconversion efficiency and lattice geometry and provides a promising approach to modifying the quantum efficiency of any lanthanide upconverter.
Co-reporter:Scott Himmelberger;Duc T. Duong;John E. Northrup;Jonathan Rivnay;Felix P. V. Koch;Bryan S. Beckingham;Natalie Stingelin;Rachel A. Segalman;Stefan C. B. Mannsfeld
Advanced Functional Materials 2015 Volume 25( Issue 17) pp:2616-2624
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201500101

Side-chain engineering is increasingly being utilized as a technique to impact the structural order and enhance the electronic properties of semiconducting polymers. However, the correlations drawn between structural changes and the resulting charge transport properties are typically indirect and qualitative in nature. In the present work, a combination of grazing incidence X-ray diffraction and crystallographic refinement calculations is used to determine the precise molecular packing structure of two thiophene-based semiconducting polymers to study the impact of side-chain modifications. The optimized structures provide high-quality fits to the experimental data and demonstrate that in addition to a large difference in interchain spacing between the two materials, there exists a significant disparity in backbone orientation as well. The calculated structures are utilized in density functional theory calculations to determine the band structure of the two materials and are shown to exhibit a dramatic disparity in interchain dispersion which accounts for the large observed difference in charge carrier mobility. The techniques presented here are meant to be general and are therefore applicable to many other highly diffracting semicrystalline polymers.

Co-reporter:Pil Sung Jo, Duc T. Duong, Joonsuk Park, Robert Sinclair, and Alberto Salleo
Chemistry of Materials 2015 Volume 27(Issue 11) pp:3979
Publication Date(Web):May 19, 2015
DOI:10.1021/acs.chemmater.5b00884
In this report, the crystallization mechanisms in solution-processed, annealed thin films of semiconducting small molecule 5,6,11,12-tetraphenylnaphthacene (rubrene) blended with three different amorphous polymers (polystyrene (PS), poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA), and poly(4-vinylpyridine) (P4VP)) are investigated. The results show that the degree of phase separation, the exact crystal structure, and the electronic properties of the blend films depend strongly on the choice of polymer binder. While rubrene films crystallized from blends with PS and P4VP consist of crystalline spherulites in a mostly orthorhombic crystal structure, rubrene in PMMA blends contains a significant fraction of triclinic phase and is generally more disordered. Structural characterizations also reveal a high degree of vertical phase separation in PS and P4VP films, which is attributed to residual solvent effects in the case of rubrene/PS films and a preferential hydrophilic interaction with the Si/SiO2 interface for rubrene/P4VP films. This type of phase separation is shown to be critical for crystallization and lead to improved field-effect mobilities. Finally, this processing technique easily allows for patterning of transistors using chemically modified substrates, which is useful for large-scale device fabrication.
Co-reporter:Saahil Mehra, Emory M. Chan and Alberto Salleo  
Journal of Materials Chemistry A 2015 vol. 3(Issue 27) pp:7172-7179
Publication Date(Web):08 Jun 2015
DOI:10.1039/C5TC01216C
Zinc oxide (ZnO) is a wide-band gap II–VI semiconductor with various optoelectronic applications owing to its transparency to visible light and tunable optical/electronic properties achieved by doping. While exquisite morphology control has been demonstrated for colloidal cadmium-chalcogenide II–VI nanocrystals over the past two decades, shape control strategies for solution-grown anisotropic ZnO nanocrystals (<100 nm) are limited in scope – they suffer from large polydispersities and highly branched nanorods. Here, we present a modular synthetic design approach that overcomes many of the synthetic challenges associated with zinc oxide nanorods and enables nearly independent control of morphology and impurity incorporation. Manipulation of alcoholysis reaction kinetics through multiple precursor solution injections and judicious use of phosphonic acid surfactants enables the synthesis of nanorods with highly tunable shapes, lengths (40–200 nm), diameters (6–80 nm), and doping levels (with aluminum – Al3+ – cations). This work will enable further studies on shape-dependent phenomena in colloidal metal oxide nanorods as well as facilitate understanding of doping and plasmonics in anisotropic nanoscale metal oxide systems.
Co-reporter:Koen Vewal;Johannes Widmer;Thomas Heumueller;Christoph J. Brabec;Michael D. McGehee;Karl Leo;Moritz Riede
Advanced Materials 2014 Volume 26( Issue 23) pp:3839-3843
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.201400114
Co-reporter:Duc T. Duong;Hung Phan;David Hanifi;Pil Sung Jo;Thuc-Quyen Nguyen
Advanced Materials 2014 Volume 26( Issue 35) pp:6069-6073
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.201402015
Co-reporter:Simone Fabiano;Scott Himmelberger;Martin Drees;Zhihua Chen;Rashid M. Altamimi;Maria Antonietta Loi;Antonio Facchetti
Advanced Energy Materials 2014 Volume 4( Issue 6) pp:
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/aenm.201301409
Co-reporter:Duc T. Duong;Victor Ho;Zhengrong Shang;Sonya Mollinger;Stefan C.B. Mannsfeld;Javier Dacuña;Michael F. Toney;Rachel Segalman
Advanced Functional Materials 2014 Volume 24( Issue 28) pp:4515-4521
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201304247

In this work, crystallization kinetics and aggregate growth of poly(3-ethylhexylthiophene) (P3EHT) thin films are studied as a function of film thickness. X-ray diffraction and optical absorption show that individual aggregates and crystallites grow anisotropically and mostly along only two packing directions: the alkyl stacking and the polymer chain backbone direction. Further, it is also determined that crystallization kinetics is limited by the reorganization of polymer chains and depends strongly on the film thickness and average molecular weight. Time-dependent, field-effect hole mobilities in thin films reveal a percolation threshold for both low and high molecular weight P3EHT. Structural analysis reveals that charge percolation requires bridged aggregates separated by a distance of ≈2–3 nm, which is on the order of the polymer persistence length. These results thus highlight the importance of tie molecules and inter-aggregate distance in supporting charge percolation in semiconducting polymer thin films. The study as a whole also demonstrates that P3EHT is an ideal model system for polythiophenes and should prove to be useful for future investigations into crystallization kinetics.

Co-reporter:Scott Himmelberger, Koen Vandewal, Zhuping Fei, Martin Heeney, and Alberto Salleo
Macromolecules 2014 Volume 47(Issue 20) pp:7151-7157
Publication Date(Web):October 16, 2014
DOI:10.1021/ma501508j
Model semiconducting polymer blends of well-controlled molecular weight distributions are fabricated and demonstrated to be a simple method to control intermolecular disorder without affecting intramolecular order or degree of aggregation. Mobility measurements exhibit that even small amounts of low molecular weight material are detrimental to charge transport. Trends in charge carrier mobility can be reproduced by a simple analytical model which indicates that carriers have no preference for high or low molecular weight chains and that charge transport is limited by interchain hopping. These results quantify the role of long polymer tie-chains and demonstrate the need for controlled polydispersity for achieving high carrier mobilities.
Co-reporter:Timothy T. Steckler ; Patrik Henriksson ; Sonya Mollinger ; Angelica Lundin ; Alberto Salleo ;Mats R. Andersson
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2013 Volume 136(Issue 4) pp:1190-1193
Publication Date(Web):December 18, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ja410527n
Here we report on the synthesis of two novel very low band gap (VLG) donor–acceptor polymers (Eg ≤ 1 eV) and an oligomer based on the thiadiazoloquinoxaline acceptor. Both polymers demonstrate decent ambipolar mobilities, with P1 showing the best performance of ∼10–2 cm2 V–1 s–1 for p- and n-type operation. These polymers are among the lowest band gap polymers (≲0.7 eV) reported, with a neutral λmax = 1476 nm (P2), which is the farthest red-shifted λmax reported to date for a soluble processable polymer. Very little has been done to characterize the electrochromic aspects of VLG polymers; interestingly, these polymers actually show a bleaching of their neutral absorptions in the near-infrared region and have an electrochromic contrast up to 30% at a switching speed of 3 s.
Co-reporter:Young Min Park, Amit Desai, and Alberto Salleo and Leslie Jimison
Chemistry of Materials 2013 Volume 25(Issue 13) pp:2571
Publication Date(Web):May 9, 2013
DOI:10.1021/cm303547a
We investigate solution based fabrication of high-k ZrO2 thin films for low-voltage-operated organic field effect transistors (OFETs). An alternative UV curing method for the densification of Zr-based gel films, which allows for low-temperature processing, is compared to the conventional thermal annealing method. Elemental and microstructural analysis shows that UV-curing induces the decomposition of organic-metal bonds and causes the densification of the metal oxide film, just as the conventional thermal annealing of gel films does, resulting in a high-k dielectric layer from Zr-based solutions. Furthermore, we found that the low temperature associated with UV-curing prevents the interface layer from intermixing with the substrate. Fabricated ZrO2 films (5–6 nm in thickness) treated with an octadecylphosphonic acid self-assembled monolayer exhibit low leakage current density (below 10–6 to 10–7 A/cm2) at 3 V and high dielectric breakdown strength (V > 4 V). Using this dielectric layer, solution processable polymer OFETs with PBTTT-C-14 as the organic semiconductor function well at low voltage (below −3 V.) The effect of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) on the morphology and microstructure of the organic semiconductor deposited on the ZrO2 dielectrics are investigated. Finally, we demonstrate solution-processable, low-temperature fabrication of OFETs on a flexible substrate.Keywords: high-k dielectric; hybrid materials; low temperature process; low-voltage organic field effect transistor; solution processed zirconium oxide;
Co-reporter:Saahil Mehra, Mark G. Christoforo, Peter Peumans and Alberto Salleo  
Nanoscale 2013 vol. 5(Issue 10) pp:4400-4403
Publication Date(Web):02 Apr 2013
DOI:10.1039/C3NR00863K
Metal nanowire transparent networks are promising replacements to indium tin oxide (ITO) transparent electrodes for optoelectronic devices. While the transparency and sheet resistance are key metrics for transparent electrode performance, independent control of the film light scattering properties is important to developing multifunctional electrodes for improved photovoltaic absorption. Here we show that controlled incorporation of ZnO nanopyramids into a metal nanowire network film affords independent, highly tunable control of the scattering properties (haze) with minimal effects on the transparency and sheet resistance. Varying the zinc oxide/silver nanostructure ratios prior to spray deposition results in sheet resistances, transmission (600 nm), and haze (600 nm) of 6–30 Ω □−1, 68–86%, and 34–66%, respectively. Incorporation of zinc oxide nanopyramid scattering agents into the conducting nanowire mesh has a negligible effect on mesh connectivity, providing a straightforward method of controlling electrode scattering properties. The decoupling of the film scattering power and electrical characteristics makes these films promising candidates for highly scattering transparent electrodes in optoelectronic devices and can be generalized to other metal nanowire films as well as carbon nanotube transparent electrodes.
Co-reporter:Chenchen Wang, Jonathan Rivnay, Scott Himmelberger, Kiarash Vakhshouri, Michael F. Toney, Enrique D. Gomez, and Alberto Salleo
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces 2013 Volume 5(Issue 7) pp:2342
Publication Date(Web):February 21, 2013
DOI:10.1021/am3027103
The microstructure and charge transport properties of binary blends of regioregular (rr) and regiorandom (RRa) poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) are investigated. X-ray diffraction of the blended films is consistent with a vertically separated structure, with rr-P3HT preferentially crystallizing at the semiconductor/dielectric interface. Thin film transistors made with these blended films preserve high field effect mobility with rr-P3HTcontent as low as 5.6%. In these dilute blends, we estimate that the thickness of rr-P3HT in the channel is only a few nanometers. Significantly, as a result of such an ultrathin active layer at the interface, short channel effects due to bulk currents are eliminated, suggesting a new route to fabricate high-performance, short-channel, and reliable organic electronic devices.Keywords: charge transport; conjugated polymers; interface; organic electronics; thin-film-transistors;
Co-reporter:Duc T. Duong, Chenchen Wang, Erin Antono, Michael F. Toney, Alberto Salleo
Organic Electronics 2013 Volume 14(Issue 5) pp:1330-1336
Publication Date(Web):May 2013
DOI:10.1016/j.orgel.2013.02.028
We investigate the chemical and structural properties of solution-processed thin films of P3HT blended with p-type dopant F4TCNQ. The maximum in-plane electrical conductivity of doped films is observed at a molar doping fraction of 0.17, in agreement with the binding mechanism of F4TCNQ:P3HT complexes. Through the use of X-ray diffraction, a previously unreported crystalline phase is observed for P3HT films doped above a critical threshold concentration. This crystalline phase involves the incorporation of F4TCNQ molecules into ordered polymer regions and ultimately improves charge dissociation, leading to higher carrier density in thin film. Finally, optical absorption and X-ray diffraction reveal that the chemical state of P3HT in solution has a dramatic impact on the electrical and structural properties of the blended films.Graphical abstractHighlights► We study the p-type doping of P3HT with optical absorption and X-ray diffraction. ► F4TCNQ forms charged complexes with P3HT in solution above a certain concentration. ► We reveal a previously unreported crystalline phase in F4TCNQ doped P3HT films. ► Chemical state of P3HT in solution impacts thin film properties. ► Maximum film conductivity of 1.8 S/Cm is observed at ∼17% dopant concentration.
Co-reporter:Leslie H. Jimison;Scott Himmelberger;Duc T. Duong;Jonathan Rivnay;Michael F. Toney
Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics 2013 Volume 51( Issue 7) pp:611-620
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/polb.23265

Abstract

Using X-ray diffraction-based pole figures, we present quantitative analysis of the microstructure of poly(3-hexylthiophene) thin films of varying thicknesses, which allows us to determine the crystallinity and microstructure at the semiconductor-dielectric interface. We find that the interface is approximately one fourth as crystalline as the bulk of the material. Furthermore, the use of a self-assembled monolayer (SAM) enhances the density of interface-nucleated crystallites by a factor of ∼20. Charge transport measurements as a function of film thickness correlate with interface crystallinity. Hence, we establish the crucial role of SAMs as nucleating agents for increasing carrier mobility in field-effect devices. © 2013 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Polym Sci Part B: Polym Phys, 2013

Co-reporter:Koen Vandewal, Scott Himmelberger, and Alberto Salleo
Macromolecules 2013 Volume 46(Issue 16) pp:6379-6387
Publication Date(Web):July 29, 2013
DOI:10.1021/ma400924b
The performance of polymer:fullerene solar cells is strongly affected by the active layer morphology and polymer microstructure. In this Perspective, we review ongoing research on how structural factors influence the photogeneration and collection of charge carriers as well as charge carrier recombination and the related open-circuit voltage. We aim to highlight unexplored research opportunities and provide some guidelines for the synthesis of new conjugated polymers for high-efficiency solar cells.
Co-reporter:Jonathan Rivnay, Stefan C. B. Mannsfeld, Chad E. Miller, Alberto Salleo, and Michael F. Toney
Chemical Reviews 2012 Volume 112(Issue 10) pp:5488
Publication Date(Web):August 9, 2012
DOI:10.1021/cr3001109
Co-reporter:Pil Sung Jo;Arturas Vailionis;Young Min Park
Advanced Materials 2012 Volume 24( Issue 24) pp:3269-3274
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.201200524
Co-reporter:Young Min Park;Jürgen Daniel;Martin Heeney
Advanced Materials 2011 Volume 23( Issue 8) pp:971-974
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.201003641
Co-reporter:Sujay Phadke;Jung-Yong Lee;Jack West;Peter Peumans
Advanced Functional Materials 2011 Volume 21( Issue 24) pp:4691-4697
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adfm.201100873

Abstract

Factors affecting charge transport through ZnO nanowire mat films were studied by aligning ZnO nanowires on substrates and coupling experimental measurements with 2D nanowire network simulations. Gallium doped ZnO nanowires were aligned on thermally oxidized silicon wafer by shearing a nanowire dispersion in ethanol. Sheet resistances of nanowire thin films that had current flowing parallel to nanowire alignment direction were compared to thin films that had current flowing perpendicular to nanowire alignment direction. Perpendicular devices showed ∼5 fold greater sheet resistance than parallel devices supporting the hypothesis that aligning nanowires would increase conductivity of ZnO nanowire electrodes. 2-D nanowire network simulations of thin films showed that the device sheet resistance was dominated by inter-wire contact resistance. For a given resistivity of ZnO nanowires, the thin film electrodes would have the lowest possible sheet resistance if the inter-wire contact resistance was one order of magnitude lower than the single nanowire resistance. Simulations suggest that the conductivity of such thin film devices could be further enhanced by using longer nanowires.

Co-reporter:David P. McMahon ; David L. Cheung ; Ludwig Goris ; Javier Dacuña ; Alberto Salleo ;Alessandro Troisi
The Journal of Physical Chemistry C 2011 Volume 115(Issue 39) pp:19386-19393
Publication Date(Web):August 24, 2011
DOI:10.1021/jp207026s
A methodology to link an atomistic description of a polymeric semiconductor with the experimental electrical characteristics of real devices is proposed. Microscopic models of poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) of different regioregularity are generated using molecular dynamics and their electronic structure determined via an approximate quantum chemistry scheme. The resulting density of trap states and distribution of localized and delocalized states is then compared with that obtained from thin film transistor measurements of P3HT at different regioregularities. The two complementary methodologies provide a converging description of the electron transport in semicrystalline P3HT and the role of regioregularity. States at the valence band edge are localized, but delocalized “band-like” states are thermally accessible and quantitatively characterized. Both theory and experiment agree that contrary to a commonly held belief the trap density and the DOS shape are little affected by the presence of regioregularity defects.
Co-reporter:Chenchen Wang;Leslie H. Jimison;Ludwig Goris;Iain McCulloch;Martin Heeney;Alexer Ziegler
Advanced Materials 2010 Volume 22( Issue 6) pp:697-701
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.200902303
Co-reporter:Jonathan Rivnay;Michael F. Toney;Yan Zheng;Isaac V. Kauvar;Zhihua Chen;Veit Wagner;Antonio Facchetti
Advanced Materials 2010 Volume 22( Issue 39) pp:4359-4363
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.201001202
Co-reporter:Alberto Salleo;R. Joseph Kline;Dean M. DeLongchamp;Michael L. Chabinyc
Advanced Materials 2010 Volume 22( Issue 34) pp:3812-3838
Publication Date(Web):
DOI:10.1002/adma.200903712

Abstract

The performance of semiconducting polymers has been steadily increasing in the last 20 years. Improved control over the microstructure of these materials and a deeper understanding of how the microstructure affects charge transport are partially responsible for such trend. The development and widespread use of techniques that allow to characterize the microstructure of semiconducting polymers is therefore instrumental for the advance of these materials. This article is a review of the characterization techniques that provide information used to enhance the understanding of structure/property relationships in semiconducting polymers. In particular, the applications of optical and X-ray spectroscopy, X-ray diffraction, and scanning probe techniques in this context are described.

Co-reporter:Sangwon Lee, Michael F. Toney, Wonhee Ko, Jason C. Randel, Hee Joon Jung, Ko Munakata, Jesse Lu, Theodore H. Geballe, Malcolm R. Beasley, Robert Sinclair, Hari C. Manoharan, and Alberto Salleo
ACS Nano 2010 Volume 4(Issue 12) pp:7524
Publication Date(Web):December 1, 2010
DOI:10.1021/nn101796e
Owing to its unique electronic properties, graphene has recently attracted wide attention in both the condensed matter physics and microelectronic device communities. Despite intense interest in this material, an industrially scalable graphene synthesis process remains elusive. Here, we demonstrate a high-throughput, low-temperature, spatially controlled and scalable epitaxial graphene (EG) synthesis technique based on laser-induced surface decomposition of the Si-rich face of a SiC single-crystal. We confirm the formation of EG on SiC as a result of excimer laser irradiation by using reflection high-energy electron diffraction (RHEED), Raman spectroscopy, synchrotron-based X-ray diffraction, transmission electron microscopy (TEM), and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). Laser fluence controls the thickness of the graphene film down to a single monolayer. Laser-synthesized graphene does not display some of the structural characteristics observed in EG grown by conventional thermal decomposition on SiC (0001), such as Bernal stacking and surface reconstruction of the underlying SiC surface.Keywords: characterization; epitaxial graphene; laser; SiC; synthesis
Co-reporter:Alberto Salleo
Materials Today 2007 Volume 10(Issue 3) pp:38-45
Publication Date(Web):March 2007
DOI:10.1016/S1369-7021(07)70018-4
Polymeric semiconductors have attracted much attention because of their possible use as active materials in printed electronics. Thin-film transistors (TFTs) are a convenient tool for studying charge-transport physics in conjugated polymers. Two families of materials are reviewed here: fluorene copolymers and polythiophenes. Because charge transport is highly anisotropic in molecular conductors, the electrical properties of conjugated polymers are strongly dependent on microstructure. Molecular weight, polydispersity, and regioregularity all affect morphology and charge-transport in these materials. Charge transport models based on microstructure are instrumental in identifying the electrical bottlenecks in these materials.
Co-reporter:Saahil Mehra, Emory M. Chan and Alberto Salleo
Journal of Materials Chemistry A 2015 - vol. 3(Issue 27) pp:NaN7179-7179
Publication Date(Web):2015/06/08
DOI:10.1039/C5TC01216C
Zinc oxide (ZnO) is a wide-band gap II–VI semiconductor with various optoelectronic applications owing to its transparency to visible light and tunable optical/electronic properties achieved by doping. While exquisite morphology control has been demonstrated for colloidal cadmium-chalcogenide II–VI nanocrystals over the past two decades, shape control strategies for solution-grown anisotropic ZnO nanocrystals (<100 nm) are limited in scope – they suffer from large polydispersities and highly branched nanorods. Here, we present a modular synthetic design approach that overcomes many of the synthetic challenges associated with zinc oxide nanorods and enables nearly independent control of morphology and impurity incorporation. Manipulation of alcoholysis reaction kinetics through multiple precursor solution injections and judicious use of phosphonic acid surfactants enables the synthesis of nanorods with highly tunable shapes, lengths (40–200 nm), diameters (6–80 nm), and doping levels (with aluminum – Al3+ – cations). This work will enable further studies on shape-dependent phenomena in colloidal metal oxide nanorods as well as facilitate understanding of doping and plasmonics in anisotropic nanoscale metal oxide systems.
4,7-DIETHYNYL-2,1,3-BENZOTHIADIAZOLE
Stannane, [2,2'-bithiophene]-5,5'-diylbis[tributyl-
Poly[2-methoxy-5-(2-ethylhexyloxy)-1,4-phenylenevinylene]
Stannane, 1,2-ethenediylbis[tributyl-
1H-Benzimidazole, dimethyl-
sodium yttrium(3+) tetrafluoride
Trichlorobenzene