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Optical Characterizations of Semiconductors

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Title: Optical Characterizations of Semiconductors


1
Optical Characterizations of Semiconductors
  • Jennifer Weinberg-Wolf
  • September 7th, 2005

2
Raman Spectroscopy
  • Inelastic scattering process that measures
    vibrational energies
  • Probe phonon modes, electronic structure and the
    coupling of the e--phonon states

3
Raman Spectroscopy
Pressure Dep of a6T
SiGe MOSFETs
Cs Intercalation of SWNT
Temperature Dep of SWNT
  • Learn about materials in a wide variety of
    environments
  • Temperature
  • Strain
  • Pressure
  • In-Situ Reactions
  • Non-invasive, non-destructive probe
  • Measure samples in many different forms
  • Single crystal, polycrystalline, amorphous,
    powder, solution
  • Multiphase samples

Diamond Anvil Cell
Lin, Öztürk, Misra, Weinberg-Wolf and McNeil, MRS
Spring 2005.
4
Experimental Setup
  • Raman Spectroscopy Single Crystals
  • Spectra-Physics Ar pump laser
  • Continuously tunable Spectra-Physics dye laser
  • Kiton Red dye 608 to 655 nm (2.04 to 1.89 eV)
  • Rhodamine 6G dye 590 to 640 nm (2.1 to 1.93 eV)
  • Dilor XY Triple monochromator
  • LN2 cooled CCD Detector
  • Photoluminescence Spectroscopy Single Crystals
  • Dilor 1403 double monochromator
  • PMT detector
  • Theoretical Simulations Single Molecule
  • Software Gaussian 03 C02 SMP
  • Machine SGI Origin 3800, 64 CPUs, 128 GB mem w/
    IRIX 6.5 OS
  • Structure Optimization HF/6-31G9(d)
  • Frequency Calculation DFT B3LYP/6-311G(d,p)

5
Outline of talk
  • Basic structural information
  • Tetracene
  • 5,6,11,12-tetraphenyl tetracene (Rubrene)
  • Vibrational coupling
  • Intermolecular Modes of Rubrene
  • Electron-phonon coupling
  • Alpha-hexathiophene resonance modes
  • Investigation of Electronic States
  • Organic Semiconductors (Rubrene)
  • Single Walled Nanotubes
  • Structural Disorder
  • Solar cell materials (amorphous and mcrystalline
    Si)

6
Why Organics?
  • Cheap(er)
  • Easily Processed
  • Environmentally Friendly
  • Flexible
  • Low power consumption
  • Chemically tailor molecules
  • Tunable white light
  • Some materials used
  • Oligoacenes, Oligothiophenes, Polyphenylene
    Vinylene (PPV), etc.
  • Devices made so far
  • OFETS, OLEDS, Photovoltaic devices, etc.

a Forrest, Nature 428, 2004, 911-918. b
Dimitrakopoulos, IBM J. Res. Dev. 45(1), 2001,
11-27. c Borchardt, Materials Today, 7(9), 2004,
42-46.
7
Vibrational spectra of organic semiconductors
Why use Raman?
  • Fundamental understanding of the relationship
    between structural and electronic properties is
    limited by the availability of high quality
    single crystals
  • Optical measurements can give insight into
    important materials properties
  • Measured device characteristics may not reflect
    bulk material properties

8
Rubrene
  • Molecular Characteristics
  • Tetracene backbone
  • C2h point group
  • 102 active Raman modes
  • HOMO/LUMO gap 2.2 eV
  • Devices
  • 100 Photoluminescence Yield
  • Common dopant in emitting and transport layers
    of current OLEDs

20 cm2V-1s-1
9
Structural Information Tetracene and Rubrene
Tetracene
Rubrene
Single Crystal Isolated Molecule
10
Raman of Rubrene Single Crystal vs. Isolated
Molecule
  • 20 of the 25 highest-intensity modes from the
    single-molecule calculation appear in the
    measured crystal spectrum
  • Only Ag and B2g modes are allowed in
    backscattering geometryunobserved modes
    presumably belong to different symmetry
  • Higher-energy observed modes are all within 2
    of calculated frequencies
  • Can use the calculated spectrum to describe the
    vibrations of the single crystal

http//www.physics.unc.edu/project/mcneil/jweinber
/anim.php
11
Outline of talk
  • Basic structural information
  • Tetracene
  • 5,6,11,12-tetraphenyl tetracene (Rubrene)
  • Vibrational coupling
  • Intermolecular Modes of Rubrene
  • Electron-phonon coupling
  • Alpha-hexathiophene resonance modes
  • Investigation of Electronic States
  • Organic Semiconductors (Rubrene)
  • Single Walled Nanotubes
  • Structural Disorder
  • Solar cell materials (amorphous and mcrystalline
    Si)

12
Raman of Rubrene Device Characteristics
  • Most FET measurements complicated by possible
    surface layer (peroxide)
  • Raman measures the bulk properties of the material

20 cm2/V-s
Calculated hole mobilities (cm2/V-s)
Highest measured hole mobilities (cm2/V-s)
Deng, et.al., J of Phys Chem B 108, 8614-8621,
2004.
13
Intermolecular Coupling
  • No observed intermolecular modes!!
  • Raman at low temperature confirms this.
  • Low intermolecular coupling makes origin of high
    mobility unclear
  • Fewer intermolecular phonons to scatter carriers
  • But low p-electron overlap (resulting from low
    packing density) usually leads to low mobility

Tetracene
Rubrene
Weinberg-Wolf, McNeil, Liu and Kloc, submited to
Phys. Rev B (April 2005).
14
Outline of talk
  • Basic structural information
  • Tetracene
  • 5,6,11,12-tetraphenyl tetracene (Rubrene)
  • Vibrational coupling
  • Intermolecular Modes of Rubrene
  • Electron-phonon coupling
  • Alpha-hexathiophene resonance modes
  • Investigation of Electronic States
  • Organic Semiconductors (Rubrene)
  • Single Walled Nanotubes
  • Structural Disorder
  • Solar cell materials (amorphous and mcrystalline
    Si)

15
Alpha-Hexathiophene (a6T)
  • Monoclinic crystal
  • C2h point group
  • 4 molecules per unit cell
  • Close packed/herringbone arrangement
  • Rigid Rod with lt1 deviation from a plane
  • 2.2 eV band gap
  • Macroscopic single crystals from Lucent
    Technologies

PRB 59 10651, 1999.
16
Electron-phonon Coupling Resonant Raman
Spectroscopy
and
  • Coupling of the electronic and phonon states
  • Electronic state has the same symmetry as the
    vibrational state
  • Large enhancement of the vibrational term
  • Also changes the lineshape of the Raman signal
    (no longer symmetric Lorentzian distribution)

17
Resonant Raman Spectra at 33K
J.R. Weinberg-Wolf and L.E. McNeil Phys. Rev. B
69 125202, March 2004.
18
Exciton Identification
  • Resonance peaks at excitation energies of
    2.066 eV and 2.068 eV.
  • Each peak has a FWHM of 2 meV.

J.R. Weinberg-Wolf and L.E. McNeil Phys. Rev. B
69 125202, March 2004.
19
Frenkel Excitons
  • Energetics
  • Lowest Singlet Energy from literature 2.3 eV
  • Singlet-Triplet Energy Shift
  • Other organic crystals 0.5 eV, here DES-T0.23
    eV
  • Davydov splitting energies
  • Singlet States typically 100-1000s cm-1
  • From literature DED 0.32 eV equals DED 2580
    cm-1
  • Triplet States typically 10s cm-1
  • In this experiment 2 meV equals ED16 cm-1
  • Or two binding sites of a singlet exciton
  • Singlet binding energy of 0.5 eV from in
    literature.

J.R. Weinberg-Wolf and L.E. McNeil Phys. Rev. B
69 125202, March 2004.
Frolov et al. PRB 63 2001, 205203 J. Chem.
Phys 109 10513, 1998. PRB 59 10651, 1999.
20
Temperature effects on Molecular Crystals
vibrations
  • Explicit Effect
  • First term change in phonon occupation numbers
  • Implicit Effect
  • Second term change in interatomic spacing with
    thermal expansion or contraction

-
Where
is the expansivity
and
is the compressibility
21
18K
Electron-phonon Coupling Temperature effects
Increasing Temperature
  • Quenching is direct link to the lifetime of the
    exciton
  • Can measure the binding energy of the triplet
    exciton or the binding energy of the trap

55K
Width (lifetime) of exciton (intermediate states)
also temperature dependent!!
Temperature dependent probability of the crystal
being in the initial state
J.R. Weinberg-Wolf and L.E. McNeil Phys. Rev. B
69 125202, March 2004.
22
Outline of talk
  • Basic structural information
  • Tetracene
  • 5,6,11,12-tetraphenyl tetracene (Rubrene)
  • Vibrational coupling
  • Intermolecular Modes of Rubrene
  • Electron-phonon coupling
  • Alpha-hexathiophene resonance modes
  • Investigation of Electronic States
  • Organic Semiconductors (Rubrene)
  • Single Walled Nanotubes
  • Structural Disorder
  • Solar cell materials (amorphous and mcrystalline
    Si)

23
Photoluminescence Spectroscopy Direct measure of
electronic states
  • Electrons are excited optically, relax and then
    return to their ground state by the emission of
    light
  • Can probe low-lying electronic states and any
    associated vibronic side bands

exciton
24
Photoluminescence
25
Electronic States Single Walled Carbon NanoTubes
(SWNTs)
(0,0)
Ch (10,5)
If n-m3N, then the tube is metallic, otherwise
it is semiconducting
Rao et al., Science 275, 187 (1997).
http//www.photon.t.u-tokyo.ac.jp/maruyama
26
SWNTs
Kataura, et.al., Syn. Met. 103 2555, 1999.
Ar 2.41 eV
Dye 2.16 to1.95 eV
DE (eV)
g02.90 eV
metallic
semiconducting
27
Outline of talk
  • Basic structural information
  • Tetracene
  • 5,6,11,12-tetraphenyl tetracene (Rubrene)
  • Vibrational coupling
  • Intermolecular Modes of Rubrene
  • Electron-phonon coupling
  • Alpha-hexathiophene resonance modes
  • Investigation of Electronic States
  • Organic Semiconductors (Rubrene)
  • Single Walled Nanotubes
  • Structural Disorder
  • Solar cell materials (amorphous and mcrystalline
    Si)

28
Structure dependence on Hydrogen dilution ratio
Crystalline volume fraction 40
Crystalline volume fraction 65
Han, Lorentzen, Weinberg-Wolf and McNeil J. of
Applied Phys, 94 2930, 2003
29
Conclusions
  • Can use optical techniques to answer a variety of
    questions
  • Raman tells more than just the vibrational
    structure of a material
  • Experiments in a variety of environments
  • Samples in a variety of phases

30
Notes
31
Raman of Rubrene Crystal Quality
  • Good check of growth process
  • Multiple crystallites from a single growth run,
    multiple scans of a single crystallite
  • All spectra are substantively the same

Yield is very pure, unstrained homogeneous
rubrene crystals
32
Raman dependence on polarization
  • Will identify the symmetry of the resonant
    vibrational modes
  • Will identify symmetry of electronic excitations
    that are resonant with the vibrational modes
  • Could confirm or refute other groups
    identification of non-resonant Raman lines (since
    their theory is not perfect in light of my data)

33
Pressure Effects
  • Pressure can cause
  • frequency shifts of elementary excitations
  • line-shape changes
  • selection rule changes accompanying phase
    transitions
  • pressure-tuned resonant Raman scattering
  • Pressure selectively enhances effects that are
    specifically associated with interactions between
    molecules
  • Effective probe of intermolecular interactions
  • In benzene, 25 kbars of pressure doubles
    intermolecular mode frequencies
  • Pressure effectively makes a molecular crystal
    less molecular because it closes the gap between
    intermolecular and intramolecular mode
    frequencies

34
Grüneisen Parameter
  • An exponent that tells how wi scales with volume.
  • The mode-Grüneisen parameter connects the volume
    dilation with each fractional change in phonon
    frequency.
  • In the Grüneisen approximation, all the mode
    parameters are assumed equal. ONLY for
    intermolecular modes
  • In Si g0.98
  • In solid noble gasses g2.5 to 2.7

35
Pressure Experimental Details DAC
  • The sample and a ruby chip for calibration are
    suspended in a 41 methanolethanol liquid.
  • As the system is compressed, the diamonds
    compress the inconel gasket that, as it decreases
    the hole size, imparts pressure on the liquid
    medium.
  • As long as the sample is not touching the sides
    of the gasket, the imparted pressure should be
    hydrostatic.
  • Possible to attain pressures up to 70 kbar with
    this setup

36
Structural Disorder Irradiated GeSi
  • Previously shown by Birtcher, Grimsditch, and
    McNeil
  • Dose of approximately 1014 ions/cm2 for 3.5-MeV
    Kr ions will cause crystalline germanium to
    become amorphous
  • Dose of approximately 1016 ions/cm2 produces a
    second structural transformation
  • Small (50-nm) cavities form in the Ge
  • Amorphous Ge becomes a sponge-like material
  • Second transformation requires higher doses of
    Kr in Si
  • What happens to Kr irradiated crystalline
    Ge1-xSix?

Phys. Rev. B, 50, 8990 (1994)
37
Structural Disorder Solar Cell Materials
where
Raman Intensity (arbitrary units)
38
Raman and Brillouin Scattering
Raman
Brillouin
McNeil, et al., Phil. Mag. Lett 84, 93 (2004)
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