4.6 Article

Key Role of End-Capping Groups in Optoelectronic Properties of Poly-p-phenylene Cation Radicals

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 118, Issue 37, Pages 21400-21408

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp5082752

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSF [OCI-0923037, CBET-0521602]
  2. NIH
  3. Extreme Science and Engineering Discovery Environment (XSEDE) - NSF [TG-CHE130101]

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Poly-p-phenylenes (PPs) are prototype systems for understanding the charge transport in pi-conjugated polymers. In a combined computational and experimental study, we demonstrate that the smooth evolution of redox and optoelectronic properties of PP cation radicals toward the polymeric limit can be significantly altered by electron-donating iso-alkyl and iso-alkoxy end-capping groups. A multiparabolic model (MPM) developed and validated here rationalizes this unexpected effect by interplay of the two modes of hole stabilization: due to the framework of equivalent p-phenylene units and due to the electron-donating end-capping groups. A symmetric, bell-shaped hole in unsubstituted PPs becomes either slightly skewed and shifted toward an end of the molecule in iso-alkyl-capped PPs or highly deformed and concentrated on a terminal unit in PPs with strongly electron-donating iso-alkoxy capping groups. The MPM shows that the observed linear 1/n evolution of the PP cation radical properties toward the polymer limit originates from the hole stabilization due to the growing chain of p-phenylene units, while shifting of the hole toward electron-donating end-capping groups leads to early breakdown of these 1/n dependencies. These insights, along with the readily applicable and flexible multistate parabolic model, can guide studies of complex donor-spacer-acceptor systems and doped molecular wires to aid the design of the next generation materials for long-range charge transport and photovoltaic applications.

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