Conventional semiconducting polymer synthesis typically involves transition metal-mediated coupling reactions that link aromatic units with single bonds along the backbone. Rotation around these bonds contributes to conformational and energetic disorder and therefore potentially limits charge delocalisation, whereas the use of transition metals presents difficulties for sustainability and application in biological environments. Here we show that a simple aldol condensation reaction can prepare polymers where double bonds lock-in a rigid backbone conformation, thus eliminating free rotation along the conjugated backbone. This polymerisation route requires neither organometallic monomers nor transition metal catalysts and offers a reliable design strategy to facilitate delocalisation of frontier molecular orbitals, elimination of energetic disorder arising from rotational torsion and allowing closer interchain electronic coupling. These characteristics are desirable for high charge carrier mobilities. Our polymers with a high electron affinity display long wavelength NIR absorption with air stable electron transport in solution processed organic thin film transistors.
The synthesis of a new thieno[3,2‐b]thiophene isoindigo (iITT) based monomer unit, and its subsequent incorporation into a series of alternating copolymers is reported. Copolymerisation with benzothiadiazole, bithiophene and thiophene comonomer units by palladium catalysed cross coupling gives three new narrow band gap semiconducting polymers for OFET applications. Extending the fused nature of the isoindigo core serves to further enhance molecular orbital overlap along the polymer backbones and facilitate good charge transport characteristics thus demonstrating the potential of extending the fused ring system that is attached to the isoindigo core. When used as the semiconducting channel in top‐gate/bottom‐contact OFET devices, good ambipolar properties are observed, with hole and electron mobilities up to 0.4 cm2/Vs and 0.7 cm2/Vs respectively. The three new polymers show good stability, with high temperature annealing showing an increase in the crystallinity of the polymers which corresponds directly to charge carrier mobility improvement as shown by X‐ray diffraction, atomic force microscopy and photothermal deflection spectroscopy.
A series of small-sized model π-conjugated oligomers have been prepared from thienylene and phenylene or dimethylor dimethoxy-substituted phenylene units. Crystallographic data for the methoxylated compound show a quasi-planar conformation with a non-covalent S-O interaction. The resulting strong conjugation in the gas phase has also been highlighted by UV/photoelectron spectroscopy and theoretical calculations (DFT). Indeed, for these compounds there is a large energy gap ∆E π arising from the interaction between the molecular orbitals of the isolated thienylene-phenylene species. This can be explained in terms of the energies of the two π orbitals of the dimethoxyphenylene unit, the shape of these molecular orbitals in a three-orbital interaction diagram and by the presence of the S···O interaction which re-
π-Conjugated thienylene-phenylene oligomers with fluorinated and dialkoxylated phenylene fragments have been designed and prepared to understand the interactions in fragment orbitals, the influence of the substituents (F, OMe) on the HOMO-LUMO gap, and the role of intramolecular non-covalent cumulative interactions in the construction of π-conjugated nanostructures. Their strong conjugation was also evidenced in the gas phase by UV photoelectron spectroscopy and theoretical calculations. These results can be explained by the crucial role of the relative energetic positions of the π orbitals of the dimethoxyphenylene, which was used to model the dialkoxyphenylene entity, in determining the π/π(*) orbital levels of the fluorinated phenylene entity. Dialkoxyphenylenes raise the HOMO orbitals, whereas fluorinated phenylenes lower the LUMO orbitals in the oligomers. In addition, the presence of S⋅⋅⋅F and H⋅⋅⋅F interactions in the fluorinated phenylene-thienylene compounds add to the S⋅⋅⋅O interactions in the mixed targets and contribute to the full conjugation in the oligomer, inducing weak inter-ring angles between the involved aromatic cycles. These results, which showed extended conjugation of the π system, were corroborated by a narrow HOMO-LUMO gap (according to DFT calculations) and by a relatively strong maximum wavelength (as obtained by TD-DFT calculations and experimental UV/Vis measurements). The crystallographic data of two mixed thienylene-(fluorinated and dialkoxylated phenylene) five-ring oligomers agree with the above results and show the formation of quasi-planar conformations with non-covalent S⋅⋅⋅O, H⋅⋅⋅F, and S⋅⋅⋅F interactions. These studies in the solid and gas phases show the relevance of associating dialkoxyphenylene and fluorinated phenylene fragments with thiophene to lead to oligomers with improved electronic delocalization for electronic or optoelectronic devices.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.