4.7 Article

On the Stability of Permanent Electrochemical Doping of Quantum Dot, Fullerene, and Conductive Polymer Films in Frozen Electrolytes for Use in Semiconductor Devices

Journal

ACS APPLIED NANO MATERIALS
Volume 2, Issue 8, Pages 4900-+

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acsanm.9b00863

Keywords

electrochemistry; quantum dots; semiconductor films; room temperature freezing; doping stability; semiconductor devices

Funding

  1. European Research Council Horizon 2020 ERC Grant [678004]
  2. European Research Council (ERC) [678004] Funding Source: European Research Council (ERC)

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Semiconductor films that allow facile ion transport can be electronically doped via electrochemistry, where the amount of injected charge can be controlled by the potential applied. To apply electrochemical doping to the design of semiconductor devices, the injected charge has to be stabilized to avoid unintentional relaxation back to the intrinsic state. Here, we investigate methods to increase the stability of electrochemically injected charges in thin films of a wide variety of semiconductor materials, namely inorganic semiconductors (ZnO NCs, CdSe NCs, and CdSe/CdS core/shell NCs) and organic semiconductors (P3DT, PCBM, and C-60). We show that by charging the semiconductors at elevated temperatures in solvents with melting points above room temperature, the charge stability at room temperature increases greatly, from seconds to days. At reduced temperature (-75 degrees C when using succinonitrile as electrolyte solvent) the injected charge becomes entirely stable on the time scale of our experiments (up to several days). Other high melting point solvents such as dimethyl sulfone, ethylene carbonate, and poly(ethylene glycol) (PEG) also offer increased charge stability at room temperature. Especially the use of PEG increases the room temperature charge stability by several orders of magnitude compared to using acetonitrile. We discuss how this improvement of the charge stability is related to the immobilization of electrolyte ions and impurities. While the electrolyte ions are immobilized, conductivity measurements show that electrons in the semiconductor films remain mobile. These results highlight the potential of using solidified electrolytes to stabilize injected charges, which is a promising step toward making semiconductor devices based on electrochemically doped semiconductor thin films.

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