Calcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorption

A novel UHV microcalorimeter has been used to study the interaction between calcium and three polymers: MEH-PPV, MEH-PPP and P3HT. All three polymers behave differently in their reaction kinetics with calcium. On MEH-PPV we measure 45 μJ/cm² of heat generated in excess of the heat of bulk metal grow...

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Main Author: Hon, Sherman Siu-Man
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/863
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spelling ndltd-LACETR-oai-collectionscanada.gc.ca-BVAU.-8632013-06-05T04:16:22ZCalcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorptionHon, Sherman Siu-ManCalorimetryPhysical chemistrySurface scienceSemiconducting polymersPolymer metallizationMEH-PPVMEH-PPPP3HTA novel UHV microcalorimeter has been used to study the interaction between calcium and three polymers: MEH-PPV, MEH-PPP and P3HT. All three polymers behave differently in their reaction kinetics with calcium. On MEH-PPV we measure 45 μJ/cm² of heat generated in excess of the heat of bulk metal growth, 120 μJ/cm² for MEH-PPP, and 100 μJ/cm² for P3HT. Comparison of the MEH-PPV and MEHPPP data indicate that the initial reaction of calcium with MEH-PPV occurs at the vinylene group. We propose, based on hypothetical models, that calcium reacts with the vinylene groups of MEH-PPV with a reaction heat of 360 kJ/mol and at a projected surface density of 1.7 sites/nm², while it reacts with the phenylene groups of MEH-PPP in a two-step process with reaction heats of 200 and 360 kJ/mol respectively, at a projected surface density of 3.5 sites/nm². Optical absorption experiments, using either a 1.85 eV diode laser or a xenon lamp coupled to a scanning monochromator, have also been performed using the same calorimeter sensor. In the case of MEH-PPV, using the laser we find an optical absorption cross-section of 3E-¹⁷ cm² per incident calcium atom at low coverages. The change in absorptance at higher coverages correlates perfectly with the population of reacted Ca atoms determined calorimetrically. The size of the absorbance cross-section, and its position just within the band gap of the polymer, are consistent with the reaction being one of polaron formation. Calcium does not appear to dope P3HT, while the photon energy range of 1.5 to 3.75 eV used in these experiments is likely too small for probing polaronic energy states in MEH-PPP.University of British Columbia2008-06-04T19:01:18Z2008-06-04T19:01:18Z20072008-06-04T19:01:18Z2008-11Electronic Thesis or Dissertation1324506 bytesapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2429/863eng
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Calorimetry
Physical chemistry
Surface science
Semiconducting polymers
Polymer metallization
MEH-PPV
MEH-PPP
P3HT
spellingShingle Calorimetry
Physical chemistry
Surface science
Semiconducting polymers
Polymer metallization
MEH-PPV
MEH-PPP
P3HT
Hon, Sherman Siu-Man
Calcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorption
description A novel UHV microcalorimeter has been used to study the interaction between calcium and three polymers: MEH-PPV, MEH-PPP and P3HT. All three polymers behave differently in their reaction kinetics with calcium. On MEH-PPV we measure 45 μJ/cm² of heat generated in excess of the heat of bulk metal growth, 120 μJ/cm² for MEH-PPP, and 100 μJ/cm² for P3HT. Comparison of the MEH-PPV and MEHPPP data indicate that the initial reaction of calcium with MEH-PPV occurs at the vinylene group. We propose, based on hypothetical models, that calcium reacts with the vinylene groups of MEH-PPV with a reaction heat of 360 kJ/mol and at a projected surface density of 1.7 sites/nm², while it reacts with the phenylene groups of MEH-PPP in a two-step process with reaction heats of 200 and 360 kJ/mol respectively, at a projected surface density of 3.5 sites/nm². Optical absorption experiments, using either a 1.85 eV diode laser or a xenon lamp coupled to a scanning monochromator, have also been performed using the same calorimeter sensor. In the case of MEH-PPV, using the laser we find an optical absorption cross-section of 3E-¹⁷ cm² per incident calcium atom at low coverages. The change in absorptance at higher coverages correlates perfectly with the population of reacted Ca atoms determined calorimetrically. The size of the absorbance cross-section, and its position just within the band gap of the polymer, are consistent with the reaction being one of polaron formation. Calcium does not appear to dope P3HT, while the photon energy range of 1.5 to 3.75 eV used in these experiments is likely too small for probing polaronic energy states in MEH-PPP.
author Hon, Sherman Siu-Man
author_facet Hon, Sherman Siu-Man
author_sort Hon, Sherman Siu-Man
title Calcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorption
title_short Calcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorption
title_full Calcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorption
title_fullStr Calcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorption
title_full_unstemmed Calcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorption
title_sort calcium vapour deposition on semiconducting polymers studied by adsorption calorimetry and visible light absorption
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/863
work_keys_str_mv AT honshermansiuman calciumvapourdepositiononsemiconductingpolymersstudiedbyadsorptioncalorimetryandvisiblelightabsorption
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