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Journal Article

Electrical Characterization of a Large‐Area Single‐Layer Cu3BHT 2D Conjugated Coordination Polymer

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Wang,  Zhiyong       
Department of Synthetic Materials and Functional Devices (SMFD), Max Planck Institute of Microstructure Physics, Max Planck Society;

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Feng,  Xinliang       
Department of Synthetic Materials and Functional Devices (SMFD), Max Planck Institute of Microstructure Physics, Max Planck Society;

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Citation

Estévez, S. M., Wang, Z., Liu, T., Caballero, G., Urbanos, F. J., Figueruelo‐Campanero, I., et al. (2024). Electrical Characterization of a Large‐Area Single‐Layer Cu3BHT 2D Conjugated Coordination Polymer. Advanced Functional Materials, 2416717. doi:10.1002/adfm.202416717.


Cite as: https://hdl.handle.net/21.11116/0000-0010-2EB9-B
Abstract
Understanding charge transport properties of large-area single-layer 2D materials is crucial for the future development of novel optoelectronic devices. In this work, the synthesis and electrical characterization of large-area single-layers of Cu3BHT 2D conjugated coordination polymers are reported. The Cu3BHT are synthesized on the water surface by the Langmuir-Blodgett method and then transferred to SiO2/Si substrates with pre-patterned electrical contacts. Electrical measurements revealed ohmic responses across areas up to ≈1 cm2, with a mean resistance of approximately 53 ± 3 kΩ at a probe separation of 50 µm. Cooling and heating cycles show hysteresis in the electrical response, suggesting different current pathways are formed as the samples underwent structural-chemical changes during temperature sweeps. This hysteresis vanished after several cycles and the conductivity shows a stable exponential behavior as a function of temperature, suggesting that a temperature-dependent tunneling process is governing the conduction mechanism in the analyzed polycrystalline single-layer Cu3BHT samples. These results, together with density functional theory calculations and valence band X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy data suggest that the single-layer samples exhibit a semiconducting rather than a metallic behavior.