Author
Listed:
- Shen Xing
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Eva Bittrich
(Division of Macromolecular Chemistry)
- Vasiliki Prifti
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Stephanie Buchholtz
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Yuan Liu
(Beijing Information Science & Technology University)
- Louis Conrad Winkler
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Maximilian F. X. Dorfner
(85748 Garching b)
- Mikhail Malanin
(Division of Macromolecular Chemistry)
- Mingchao Wang
(Shenzhen Graduate School)
- Guoqin Liu
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Dinara Samigullina
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Anna-Lena Hofmann
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Jakob Wolansky
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Jörn Vahland
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Tianyi Zhang
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Rongjuan Huang
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Samuel Dominic Seddon
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Dieter Fischer
(Division of Macromolecular Chemistry)
- Sebastian Reineke
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Frank Ortmann
(85748 Garching b)
- Xinliang Feng
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Hans Kleemann
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Johannes Benduhn
(Technische Universität Dresden)
- Karl Leo
(Technische Universität Dresden)
Abstract
Precise structural control is essential for high-performance semiconductors. In organic electronics, traditional methods for tuning the dimensions of device structures often rely on cumbersome, limited-resolution processes such as shadow mask patterning, printing, or viscosity tuning. Here, we report ultraviolet (UV) irradiation in ambient conditions as a transformative approach for tuning structural parameters of organic small molecule hole transport layers (HTLs) in vertical and lateral directions. The method preserves HTL conductivity while facilitating uniform thickness reduction through synergistic photo-induced oligomerization and photo-oxidative layer shrinking. Controlled thinning applies to various organic materials. In cavity architectures, UV-treated organic photodetectors show narrowband detection from 900 to 1200 nm with a full width at half maximum down to 25 nm, and UV-treated organic light-emitting diodes exhibit 75 nm peak tunability. Moreover, this strategy permits micrometer-scale lateral patterning of HTLs. Our work opens new opportunities for precise and practical engineering for organic electronic devices.
Suggested Citation
Shen Xing & Eva Bittrich & Vasiliki Prifti & Stephanie Buchholtz & Yuan Liu & Louis Conrad Winkler & Maximilian F. X. Dorfner & Mikhail Malanin & Mingchao Wang & Guoqin Liu & Dinara Samigullina & Anna, 2025.
"Light-induced fine-tuning of optical cavities for organic optoelectronic devices,"
Nature Communications, Nature, vol. 16(1), pages 1-13, December.
Handle:
RePEc:nat:natcom:v:16:y:2025:i:1:d:10.1038_s41467-025-64272-7
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-025-64272-7
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