Abstract

Accumulated charge measurement (ACM) is a new experimental technique for organic semiconductors to evaluate the charge injection barrier at the semiconductor–metal interface directly using a metal–insulator–semiconductor–metal (MISM) capacitor. In this technique, the precise estimation of the electrostatic capacity of the insulator layer (CI) is required for the analysis. The information of this parameter is, in principle, included in the ACM data; however, it is not directly evaluated because of the error resulting from the charge-spreading effect in an organic MISM capacitor with an unrestricted electrode structure. Therefore, the CI in previous ACM experiments has been independently estimated from the area of the electrode. In this study, a novel design of a substrate with a restricted-bottom-electrode structure is reported. Using the newly designed substrate, it was possible to suppress the charge-spreading effect and successfully estimate precise values of CI directly from the ACM data. Subsequently, it was possible to evaluate the injection barriers at the metal-free phthalocyanine (H2Pc)–Ag and pentacene–Au interfaces, which were 0.4 and 0.15 eV, respectively. The built-in potentials in the semiconductor layer were also determined for the samples used in the measurement.

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