High Sensitivity Organic Negative Temperature Coefficient Thermistors Based on Rylene Diimide Derivatives
Abstract
The development of organic temperature sensors is critical for advancing next-generation technologies such as artificial skin, soft robotics, and wearable electronics. To date, improving the temperature sensitivity of flexible temperature sensors remains a significant challenge. Organic semiconductors with a negative temperature coefficient (NTC) effect show a highly sensitive temperature-resistance response, giving them great potential for use in flexible temperature sensors. This study investigates how molecular structure governs the negative temperature coefficient (NTC) effect in organic thermistors using three rylene diimide derivatives (NDI, PDI, TDI). Systematic conjugation extension yielded tunable energy gaps (1.9-2.9 eV) and altered crystalline packing due to reduced core steric hindrance. The resulting thermistors showed distinct resistance-temperature (R-T) correlations, revealing a direct link between molecular packing, energy gaps, and responsivity. Their R-T curves exhibit a two-stage characteristic from differing conduction mechanisms. PDI-based devices achieved a wide linear range (123-473 K) and a high sensitivity of -7.4 %/K, ranking among the best organic thermistors. These findings provide fundamental insights for designing optimized organic NTC thermistors.Keywords:Negative Temperature Coefficient; variable-range hopping (VRH); Arrhenius conduction; Thin-film thermistor; Rylene diimide.
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