Strongly electron-deficient (n-type) main-chain π-conjugated polymers are commonly prepared via well-established step-growth polycondensation protocols which enable limited control over polymerization. Here we demonstrate that activated Zn and electron-deficient brominated thiophene-naphthalene diimide oligomers form anion-radical complexes instead of conventional Zn-organic derivatives. These highly unusual zinc complexes undergo Ni-catalyzed chain-growth polymerization leading to n-type conjugated polymers with controlled molecular weight, relatively narrow polydispersities, and specific end-functions.
The crystalline, spinless π dimer (1 ⋅PF ) was obtained by the oxidation of bipyrrole 1 with ferrocenium hexafluorophosphate. The diamagnetic species generated electrochemically in solution was identified as the σ dimer by NMR spectroscopy.
Poly(dithienothiophene)s (PDTTs), low band-gap conjugated polymers with polythiophene-like chain where an aromatic thienothiophene moiety is fused to each thiophene ring, were studied using Raman spectroscopy, photoinduced infrared absorption, as well as attenuated total reflection Fourier transform infrared (ATR-FTIR) and electron spin resonance (ESR) spectroelectrochemistry. The spectroelectrochemical studies were performed in situ during p-and n-doping (electrochemical oxidation and reduction, respectively). Raman lines of the pristine polymers are compared to infrared active vibration (IRAV) bands due to the charge carriers injected by the electrochemical doping processes or by illumination. The different π-electron distribution along the polythiophene-like chain, which determines the different band-gap sizes, also account for the different lattice relaxations and vibrational behaviors shown by these polymers. By means of in situ ESR spectroscopy, the formation of paramagnetic positive and negative charge carriers with unusually high g-factors could be proved.
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