Abstract
The sensitive effect of O2 adsorption on the electronic properties of organic semiconductors is investigated by band structure calculation. O2 can actually p-dope the host materials even without illumination, i.e., a ground state property, in the circumstance of saturated coverage. Due to hybridization between O2 and polymer, Fermi level of the oxygenated system is pinned at the nearly half-filled oxygen band and overlap with host valence band. The doping depends critically on the ionization potential. Each O2 can dope more than 0.1 hole in dark and a full charge-transfer excitation around 2.3eV photon energy is predicted.