Abstract

High permittivity materials are required for efficient organic photovoltaic devices, and the addition of the conjugated polymer composite poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophen) polystyrene sulfonate (PEDOT:PSS) to dielectric polymers has been shown to significantly heighten their permittivity. The permittivity of PEDOT:PSS at the optical and microwave frequencies has been investigated, but PEDOT:PSS layers are mainly used for low-frequency device applications, where accurate dielectric property measurements are hindered by their high electrical conductivity and the problems arising from the metal-polymer interfaces. Here, we determine the complex relative permittivity (εr*=εr'-jεr″) of PEDOT:PSS layers perpendicular to the layer plane in the 10-2-106 Hz range by combining data from the reactive energy estimations and electrochemical impedance spectroscopy, and discover that: εr' at <1Hz is ultra-high (∼106) decreasing with frequency to ∼5 at 106 Hz; the experimental data fit the Cole-Cole dielectric relaxation model by considering multiple relaxation mechanisms; PEDOT:PSS polarizes nonlinearly and εr' increases with the intensity of the applied external field; low frequency εr' increases with both thickness and temperature of the layer, opposite trend of temperature-dependence prevails at >103Hz; the dielectric properties of PEDOT:PSS are highly anisotropic and the in-plane εr' at 1.0kHz is three orders of magnitude higher than the vertical εr'; and that the εr'' decreases proportional to the reciprocal of frequency (1/f). The latter finding provides an explanation for the ubiquitous pink noise accompanying signals transmitted through organic conductor links. The described methodology can be adopted for investigations on other conjugated polymers.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call