Advances in hybrid organic/inorganic architectures for optoelectronics can be achieved by understanding how the atomic and electronic degrees of freedom cooperate or compete to yield the desired functional properties. Here… Click to show full abstract
Advances in hybrid organic/inorganic architectures for optoelectronics can be achieved by understanding how the atomic and electronic degrees of freedom cooperate or compete to yield the desired functional properties. Here we show how work-function changes are modulated by the structure of the organic components in model hybrid systems. We consider two cyano-quinodimethane derivatives (F4-TCNQ and F6-TCNNQ), which are strong electron-acceptor molecules, adsorbed on H-Si(111). From systematic structure searches employing range-separated hybrid HSE06 functional including many body van der Waals contributions, we predict that despite their similar composition, these molecules adsorb with significantly different densely-packed geometries in the first layer, due to strong intermolecular interaction. F6-TCNNQ shows a much stronger intralayer interaction (primarily due to van der Waals contributions) than F4-TCNQ in multilayered structures. The densely-packed geometries induce a large interface-charge rearrangement that result in a work-function increase of 1.11 and 1.76 eV for F4-TCNQ and F6-TCNNQ, respectively. Nuclear fluctuations at room temperature produce a wide distribution of work-function values, well modeled by a normal distribution with {\sigma}=0.17 eV. We corroborate our findings with experimental evidence of pronounced island formation for F6-TCNNQ on H-Si(111) and with the agreement of trends between predicted and measured work-function changes.
               
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