Small-molecule
organic semiconductors have displayed remarkable
electronic properties with a multitude of π-conjugated structures
developed and fine-tuned over recent years to afford highly efficient
hole- and electron-transporting materials. Already making a significant
impact on organic electronic applications including organic field-effect
transistors and solar cells, this class of materials is also now naturally
being considered for the emerging field of organic bioelectronics.
In efforts aimed at identifying and developing (semi)conducting materials
for bioelectronic applications, particular attention has been placed
on materials displaying mixed ionic and electronic conduction to interface
efficiently with the inherently ionic biological world. Such mixed
conductors are conveniently evaluated using an organic electrochemical
transistor, which further presents itself as an ideal bioelectronic
device for transducing biological signals into electrical signals.
Here, we review recent literature relevant for the design of small-molecule
mixed ionic and electronic conductors. We assess important classes
of p- and n-type small-molecule semiconductors, consider structural
modifications relevant for mixed conduction and for specific interactions
with ionic species, and discuss the outlook of small-molecule semiconductors
in the context of organic bioelectronics.
A series of copolymers containing a glycolated 1,4‐dithienyl‐2,3,5,6‐tetrafluorophenylene unit copolymerized with thiophene, bithiophene, thienothiophene and 1,2,4,5‐tetrafluorobenzene comonomer units were designed and synthesised by direct heteroarylation polymerisation. The optical, electrochemical, electrochromic and solid‐state structural properties of the copolymers were investigated. The copolymers exhibit stable redox properties in organic solvents and promising redox properties in thin film configuration with an aqueous electrolyte. Finally, the potential of the copolymers as active materials in organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) was assessed, and promising performance was shown as an accumulation‐mode OECT material with a peak transconductance of 0.17 mS and a good on/off ratio of 105 for the thiophene copolymer.
Thiophenes functionalised in the 3-position are ubiquitous building blocks for the design and synthesis of organic semiconductors. Their non-centrosymmetric nature has long been used as a powerful synthetic design tool exemplified by the vastly different properties of regiorandom and regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene) owing to the repulsive head-to-head interactions between neighbouring side chains in the regiorandom polymer. The renewed interest in highly electron-rich 3-alkoxythiophene based polymers for bioelectronic applications opens up new considerations around the regiochemistry of these systems as both the head-to-tail and head-to-head couplings adopt near-planar conformations due to attractive intramolecular SÀ O interactions. To understand how this increased flexibility in the molecular design can be used advantageously, we explore in detail the geometrical and electronic effects that influence the optical, electrochemical, structural, and electrical properties of a series of six polythiophene derivatives with varying regiochemistry and comonomer composition. We show how the interplay between conformational disorder, backbone coplanarity and polaron distribution affects the mixed ionic-electronic conduction. Ultimately, we use these findings to identify a new conformationally restricted polythiophene derivative for p-type accumulation-mode organic electrochemical transistor applications with performance on par with state-of-the-art mixed conductors evidenced by a μC* product of 267 F V À 1 cm À 1 s À 1 .
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