Electronic and Crystallographic Examinations of the Homoepitaxially Grown Rubrene Single Crystals.
Yasuo NakayamaMasaki IwashitaMitsuru KikuchiRyohei TsurutaKoki YoshidaYuki GunjoYusuke YabaraTakuya HosokaiTomoyuki KoganezawaSeiichiro IzawaMasahiro HiramotoPublished in: Materials (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
Homoepitaxial growth of organic semiconductor single crystals is a promising methodology toward the establishment of doping technology for organic opto-electronic applications. In this study, both electronic and crystallographic properties of homoepitaxially grown single crystals of rubrene were accurately examined. Undistorted lattice structures of homoepitaxial rubrene were confirmed by high-resolution analyses of grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) using synchrotron radiation. Upon bulk doping of acceptor molecules into the homoepitaxial single crystals of rubrene, highly sensitive photoelectron yield spectroscopy (PYS) measurements unveiled a transition of the electronic states, from induction of hole states at the valence band maximum at an adequate doping ratio (10 ppm), to disturbance of the valence band itself for excessive ratios (≥ 1000 ppm), probably due to the lattice distortion.