No Access Submitted: 20 October 2011 Accepted: 02 March 2012 Published Online: 13 April 2012
Journal of Applied Physics 111, 074907 (2012); https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3699367
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  • Daniel W. Shaw
  • Kevin Bufkin
  • Alexandr A. Baronov
  • Brad L. Johnson
  • David L. Patrick
A method for rapid, mass-efficient deposition of highly crystalline organic films under near ambient conditions of pressure and temperature is reported based on delivery of an organic precursor via an impinging gas jet to a substrate coated by a thin liquid solvent layer. Films of the organic semiconductor tetracene were deposited by sublimation into a flow of argon carrier gas directed at an indium-tin-oxide/glass substrate coated by a thin layer of bis(2-ethylhexyl)sebecate, and growth was followed in situ with optical microscopy. A fluid dynamics model is applied to account for the gas phase transport and aggregation, and the results compared to experiment. The combination of gas jet delivery with an organic-vapor-liquid-solid growth mechanism leads to larger crystals and lower nucleation densities than on bare surfaces, with markedly different nucleation and growth kinetics. An explanation based on enhanced solution-phase diffusivity and a larger critical nucleus size in the liquid layer is proposed to account for the differences.
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation (DMR-0705908). The authors thank C. Lund and B. Ricker for their contributions.
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