Energy level alignment at hybridized organic-metal interfaces from a GW projection approach
ORAL
Abstract
Energy level alignments at organic-metal interfaces are of profound importance in numerous (opto)electronic applications. Standard density functional theory (DFT) calculations generally give incorrect energy level alignments and missing long-range polarization effects. Previous efforts to address this problem using the many-electron GW method have focused on physisorbed systems where hybridization effects are insignificant. Here, we use state-of-the-art GW methods to predict the level alignment at the amine-Au interface, where molecular levels do hybridize with metallic states. This non-trivial hybridization implies that DFT result is a poor approximation to the quasiparticle states. However, we find that the self-energy operator is approximately diagonal in the molecular basis, allowing us to use a projection approach to predict the level alignments. Our results indicate that the metallic substrate reduces the HOMO-LUMO gap by 3.5~4.0 eV, depending on the molecular coverage/presence of Au adatoms. Our GW results are further compared with those of a simple image charge model that describes the level alignment in physisorbed systems.
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Authors
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Yifeng Chen
Department of Physics and Centre for Advanced 2D Materials, National University of Singapore
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Isaac Tamblyn
Department of Physics, University of Ontario Institute of Technology, Canada
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Su Ying Quek
Department of Physics and Centre for Advanced 2D Materials, National University of Singapore