A.C. and D.C. Conduction processes in octakis[(4-tert-butylbenzylthio)- porphyrazinato]Cu(II) thin films with gold electrodes

10Citations
Citations of this article
12Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

The d.c. and a.c. electrical transport properties of Au/Pz/Au devices with various thickness of Pz(octakis[(4-tert-butylbenzylthio)-porphyrazinato]Cu(II)) layer have been investigated. Measurements revealed that, in contrast to previously investigated Au/Pc/Au structures, low voltage d.c. behaviour of the films can be described by the field-lowering mechanisms with a log(J) ∞ V1/2 current density-voltage characteristics under forward and reverse bias. For high reverse voltages, the observed ln(J/V2) - 1/V characteristics indicated that the origin of conduction mechanism is Fowler-Nordheim tunnelling (FNT). On the other hand, the voltage dependence of current density at the higher forward-voltage region indicates that the mechanism of conduction in Au/Pz/Au devices is space charge limited conduction dominated by exponential trap distribution. A thickness independent barrier height was observed for tunnelling, while the total trap concentration show a general tendency to decrease with increasing film thickness. The a.c. conductivity showed two regions in the ln(σ a.c.) - ln( f ) plots having different slopes, leading to the conclusion that for low frequency region, the dominant conduction mechanism is a small polaron tunnelling at all temperatures, whereas for high frequency region, correlated barrier hopping model is the dominant mechanism in the investigated devices. © Indian Academy of Sciences.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Keskin, B., Altindal, A., Avciata, U., & Gül, A. (2014). A.C. and D.C. Conduction processes in octakis[(4-tert-butylbenzylthio)- porphyrazinato]Cu(II) thin films with gold electrodes. Bulletin of Materials Science, 37(3), 461–468. https://doi.org/10.1007/s12034-014-0691-0

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free