INVESTIGADORES
GERVALDO Miguel Andres
congresos y reuniones científicas
Título:
Surface Photovoltage generation at donor-acceptor porphyrin polymer interfaces
Autor/es:
J. DURANTINI, M. SANTO, E. DURANTINI, L. OTERO, T. DITTRICH, M. GERVALDO
Reunión:
Encuentro; XI encuentro latinoamericano de fotoquímica y fotobiología; 2012
Institución organizadora:
UNRC
Resumen:
Interfaces between semiconductors and organic polymers are crucial for electronic properties and charge separation in devices such as organic light emitting diodes; organic field effect transistors; electrochromic systems and organic solar cells. These applications are closely related to the behavior of photogenerated charge carriers. It is valuable to investigate the surface photovoltage properties of these organic polymers since such investigation gives us information about the photogenerated charge carriers at semiconductors surface or interface, electron transfer and charge separation effect. On the other hand many studies on the development of organic optoelectronics incorporate chlorophyll Derivatives and several analogues of natural pigments, such as porphyrins and phthalocyanine compounds, as light receptors and charge storage units. Donor-acceptor systems can be constructed using porphyrins and C60 Buckminsterfullerene opening up the possibility of constructing artificial photosynthetic systems in which there is a photoinduced electron or energy transfer process from a chromophore donor to a fullerene acceptor. Furthermore, it is possible to modify the porphyrin ring with substituents with the capacity to form electropolymerized films over conducting surfaces. The electrochemical polymerization permits fine control over thickness and polymer properties; allowing to obtain stable and reproducible organic films. In this work we report the surface photovoltage spectroscopy (SPV) of novel porphyrin electropolymerized films. SPV is a contactless technique for characterization of semiconductors and semiconductor interfaces and the measurements are based on monitoring illumination-induced changes in the surface potential as a function of incident photon energy. Deposition of an additional C60 layer on top of the porphyrin films show an increase in the SPV values, showing the efficiency of these donor-acceptor systems