Tailoring Charge-Transfer at Metal-Organic Interfaces Using Designer Shockley Surface States
Tailoring Charge-Transfer at Metal-Organic Interfaces Using Designer Shockley Surface States
Metal-organic interfaces determine critical processes in organic electronic devices. The frontier molecular orbitals (highest occupied and lowest unoccupied molecular orbital, HOMO and LUMO) are crucial in determining charge-injection and -collection processes into and from the organic semiconductor films. Here we show that we are able to tune the interfacial electronic structure of a strongly interacting interfacial system formed by adsorption of the electron acceptor 1,4,5,8,9,11-hexaazatriphenylenehexacarbonitrile (HATCN, C18N12) on Ag thin films on Cu(111). The thickness-dependent Shockley surface state emerging on this layered metallic system couples to the LUMO, which allows precise control over the energetic position and filling of the charge-transfer interface state relative to the Fermi level (EF). Our ability to tune the interfacial electronic structure while maintaining the structure of the molecular film represents an important step towards designing organic semiconductor interfaces.
Anubhab Chakraborty、Oliver L. A. Monti
物理学半导体技术电子技术概论
Anubhab Chakraborty,Oliver L. A. Monti.Tailoring Charge-Transfer at Metal-Organic Interfaces Using Designer Shockley Surface States[EB/OL].(2025-04-07)[2025-04-28].https://arxiv.org/abs/2504.05526.点此复制
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