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Programmed Heterostructures for Enhanced Electrical Conductivity.

Neha SinghAnkur MalikParas SethiPrakash Chandra Mondal
Published in: Small (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2024)
Interfacial electron transport in multicomponent systems plays a crucial role in controlling electrical conductivity. Organic-inorganic heterostructures electronic devices where all the entities are covalently bonded to each other can reduce interfacial electrical resistance, thus suitable for low-power consumption electronic operations. Programmed heterostructures of covalently bonded interfaces between ITO-ethynylbenzene (EB) and EB-zinc ferrite (ZF) nanoparticles, a programmed structure showing 67 978-fold enhancement of electrical current as compared to pristine NPs-based two terminal devices are created. An electrochemical approach is adopted to prepare nearly π-conjugated EB oligomer films of thickness ≈26 nm on ITO-electrode on which ZF NPs are chemically attached. A "flip-chip" method is employed to combine two EB-ZnFe 2 O 4 NPs-ITO to probe electrical conductivity and charge conduction mechanism. The EB-ZnFe 2 O 4 NPs exhibit strong electronic coupling at ITO-EB and EB-NPs with an energy barrier of 0.13 eV between the ITO Fermi level and the LUMO of EB-ZF NPs for efficient charge transport. Both the DC and AC-based electrical measurements manifest a low resistance at ITO-EB and EB-ZF NPs, revealing enhanced electrical current at ± 1.5 V. The programmed heterostructure devices can meet a strategy to create well-controlled molecular layers for electronic applications toward miniaturized components that shorten charge carrier distance, and interfacial resistance.
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