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Australian Journal of Chemistry Australian Journal of Chemistry Society
An international journal for chemical science
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Theory of injection photovoltages in organic insulators

JS Bonham

Australian Journal of Chemistry 29(10) 2123 - 2136
Published: 1976

Abstract

Development of an open-circuit photovoltage, U, in an organic insulator by photoinjection of charge carriers from the electrodes is treated theoretically. In the single-carrier case (both electrodes injecting the same carrier) it is shown that, in the absence of surface traps, U increases at a rate of 60 mV per decade of light intensity, II, above a threshold value of II. Photoinjection from the back (unilluminated) electrode by incompletely absorbed light causes U to become independent of ll at high light intensity. The same process may also cause U to change sign as the wavelength approaches an absorption minimum of the organic. Traps in the bulk of the insulator do not affect the single-carrier photovoltage, but traps at the surface may complicate the intensity dependence of U if they are involved in the injection mechanism. They may for example cause U to decrease and change sign at high n. Only shallow surface traps are considered. Possible effects of surface states are discussed briefly. The major assumption of this paper--neglect of all but injected charge carriers-breaks down in principle in the two-carrier case. However, if there are no sources of photovaltage in the bulk of the insulator the two-carrier case gives a stronger dependence of U on II, and no saturation or possibility of change of sign with wavelength variation. Predictions of the model are shown to agree with the results for a number of systems reported in the literature.

https://doi.org/10.1071/CH9762123

© CSIRO 1976

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