Litcius/Paper detail

A universal Urbach rule for disordered organic semiconductors

Christina Kaiser, Oskar J. Sandberg, Nasim Zarrabi, Wei Li, Paul Meredith, Ardalan Armin

2021Nature Communications220 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

In crystalline semiconductors, absorption onset sharpness is characterized by temperature-dependent Urbach energies. These energies quantify the static, structural disorder causing localized exponential-tail states, and dynamic disorder from electron-phonon scattering. Applicability of this exponential-tail model to disordered solids has been long debated. Nonetheless, exponential fittings are routinely applied to sub-gap absorption analysis of organic semiconductors. Herein, we elucidate the sub-gap spectral line-shapes of organic semiconductors and their blends by temperature-dependent quantum efficiency measurements. We find that sub-gap absorption due to singlet excitons is universally dominated by thermal broadening at low photon energies and the associated Urbach energy equals the thermal energy, regardless of static disorder. This is consistent with absorptions obtained from a convolution of Gaussian density of excitonic states weighted by Boltzmann-like thermally activated optical transitions. A simple model is presented that explains absorption line-shapes of disordered systems, and we also provide a strategy to determine the excitonic disorder energy. Our findings elaborate the meaning of the Urbach energy in molecular solids and relate the photo-physics to static disorder, crucial for optimizing organic solar cells for which we present a revisited radiative open-circuit voltage limit.

Topics & Concepts

ExcitonAbsorption (acoustics)Organic semiconductorCondensed matter physicsMaterials scienceMolecular physicsSinglet stateThermalRadiative transferAbsorption spectroscopySemiconductorConvolution (computer science)PhotoluminescencePhotonPhoton energyDensity of statesGaussianChemical physicsOrganic solar cellPhysicsExponential functionSpectral lineChemistryBinding energyEnergy (signal processing)QuantumComputational physicsExponential decayOrganic Electronics and PhotovoltaicsOrganic and Molecular Conductors ResearchChemical and Physical Properties of Materials