The
development of low-band gap conjugated polymers with strong
absorption in the second near-infrared (NIR-II) region is a big challenge
because of the scarcity of an effective molecular design strategy.
In the current paper, a series of conjugated polymers based on diketopyrrolopyrrole-containing
quinoidal compounds have been synthesized and characterized. These
polymers exhibited strong absorption in the NIR-II region with the
absorption maxima above 1000 nm and optical band gaps as low as 0.84
eV. Owing to their strong near-infrared absorption, the polymers exhibited
high photothermal conversion efficiencies of up to 53.1% upon 1064
nm laser irradiation (1 W cm–2). Top-gate and bottom-contact
organic thin-film transistors (OTFTs) were fabricated to investigate
their semiconducting properties. All the polymers showed ambipolar
charge transport characteristics with reliable mobilities on the order
of 10–1 cm2 V–1 s–1. Low optical band gaps, high photothermal conversion
efficiencies, and good charge transport properties endow these polymers
with great potential in organic electronics and bio-related applications.
The classical synthesis of quinoids, which involves Takahashi coupling and subsequent oxidation, often gives only low to medium yields. Herein, we disclose keto-enol-tautomerism-assisted spontaneous air oxidation of the coupling products...
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