4.8 Article

Approaching disorder-free transport in high-mobility conjugated polymers

Journal

NATURE
Volume 515, Issue 7527, Pages 384-388

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/nature13854

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/G060738/1]
  2. Technology Strategy Board (PORSCHED project)
  3. Cambridge Commonwealth Trust through Cambridge International Scholarship
  4. German Research Foundation
  5. NanoDTC in Cambridge
  6. European Commission/Region Wallonne (FEDER - Smartfilm RF project)
  7. Interuniversity Attraction Pole programme of the Belgian Federal Science Policy Office [PAI 7/05]
  8. Programme d'Excellence de la Region Wallonne (OPTI2MAT project)
  9. FNRS-FRFC
  10. Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council [EP/G060738/1, 1108202] Funding Source: researchfish
  11. EPSRC [EP/G060738/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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Conjugated polymers enable the production of flexible semiconductor devices that can be processed from solution at low temperatures. Over the past 25 years, device performance has improved greatly as a wide variety of molecular structures have been studied(1). However, one major limitation has not been overcome; transport properties in polymer films are still limited by pervasive conformational and energetic disorder(2-5). This not only limits the rational design of materials with higher performance, but also prevents the study of physical phenomena associated with an extended pi-electron delocalization along the polymer backbone. Here we report a comparative transport study of several high-mobility conjugated polymers by field-effect-modulated Seebeck, transistor and sub-bandgap optical absorption measurements. We show that in several of these polymers, most notably in a recently reported, indacenodithiophene-based donor-acceptor copolymer with a near-amorphous microstructure(6), the charge transport properties approach intrinsic disorder-free limits at which all molecular sites are thermally accessible. Molecular dynamics simulations identify the origin of this long sought-after regime as a planar, torsion-free backbone conformation that is surprisingly resilient to side-chain disorder. Our results provide molecular-design guidelines for 'disorder-free' conjugated polymers.

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