4.7 Article

Drastic Control of Texture in a High Performance n-Type Polymeric Semiconductor and Implications for Charge Transport

Journal

MACROMOLECULES
Volume 44, Issue 13, Pages 5246-5255

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/ma200864s

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation
  2. Amber Capital Investment Management received through the Italian Scientists and Scholars of North America Foundation
  3. Center for Advanced Molecular Photo-voltaics [KUS-C1-015-21]
  4. German Federal Ministry of Science and Education [BMBF FKZ 03X3525D]

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Control of crystallographic texture from mostly face-on to edge-on is observed for the film morphology of the n-type semicrystalline polymer [N,N-9-bis(2-octyldodecyl)naphthalene-1,4,5,8-bis(dicarboximide)-2,6-diy1]alt-5,59-(2,29-bithiophene)}, P(NDI2OD-T2), when annealing the film to the polymer melting point followed by slow cooling to ambient temperature. A variety of X-ray diffraction analyses, including pole figure construction and Fourier transform peak shape deconvolution, are employed to quantify the texture change, relative degree of crystallinity and lattice order. We find that annealing the polymer film to the melt leads to a shift from 77.5% face-on to 94.6% edge-on lamellar texture as well as to a 2-fold increase in crystallinity and a 40% decrease in intracrystallite cumulative disorder. The texture change results in a significant drop in the electron-only diode current density through the film thickness upon melt annealing while little change is observed in the in-plane transport of bottom gated thin film transistors. This suggests that the texture change is prevalent in the film interior and that either the (bottom) surface structure is different from the interior structure or the intracrystalline order and texture play a secondary role in transistor transport for this material.

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