4.6 Article

Emergent Insulator-Metal Transition with Tunable Optical and Electrical Gap in Thin Films of a Molecular Conducting Composite

Journal

ACS APPLIED ELECTRONIC MATERIALS
Volume 4, Issue 5, Pages 2432-2441

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsaelm.2c00224

Keywords

molecular metal; composites; insulator-metal transition; tunable bandgap; optoelectronic properties

Funding

  1. Spanish Ministry [PID2019-111682RB-I00]
  2. Generalitat de Catalunya [2017-SGR-918]
  3. Ramon y Cajal Fellowship [RyC2019-028474-I]
  4. European Research Council (ERC) under the European Union [ERC-724981]
  5. Severo Ochoa program for Centers of Excellence in RD [CEX2019-000917-S]
  6. Chinese Council Ph.D. fellowship

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Composites with different components exhibit unique synergistic properties, and the energy bandgap in their electronic structure can be tuned to design tailor-made systems. A study found an emergent insulator-metal transition in bilayered thin-films at room temperature, and the electrical/optical bandgaps could be adjusted. This makes these materials ideal candidates for flexible and soft sensors for various applications.
Composites exhibit unique synergistic properties emerging when components with different properties are combined. The tuning of the energy bandgap in the electronic structure of the material allows designing tailor-made systems with desirable mechanical, electrical, optical, and/or thermal properties. Here, we study an emergent insulator-metal transition at room temperature in bilayered (BL) thin-films comprised of polycarbonate/ molecular-metal composites. Temperature-dependent resistance measurements allow monitoring of the electrical bandgap, which is in agreement with the optical bandgap extracted by optical absorption spectroscopy. The semiconductor-like properties of BL films, made with bis(ethylenedithio)-tetrathiafulvalene (BEDT-TTF or ET) alpha-ET2I3 (nano)microcrystals as two-dimensional molecular conductor on one side and insulator polycarbonate as a second ingredient, are attributed to an emergent phenomenon equivalent to the transition from an insulator to a metal. This made it possible to obtain semiconducting BL films with tunable electrical/optical bandgaps ranging from 0 to 2.9 eV. A remarkable aspect is the similarity close to room temperature of the thermal and mechanical properties of both composite components, making these materials ideal candidates to fabricate flexible and soft sensors for stress, pressure, and temperature aiming at applications in wearable human health care and bioelectronics.

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