4.8 Article

Molecular Orientation Change in Naphthalene Diimide Thin Films Induced by Removal of Thermally Cleavable Substituents

Journal

CHEMISTRY OF MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 5, Pages 1729-1737

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.8b05237

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NEDO
  2. JSPS
  3. ALCA program from the Japanese Science and Technology Agency (JST) [JPMJAL 1603]
  4. ERATO program from the Japanese Science and Technology Agency (JST) [JPMJER 1302]
  5. COI program from the Japanese Science and Technology Agency (JST)

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The potential of naphthalene-1,8:4,5-tetracarboxylic diimide (NDI-H) as a transparent electron-transporting material was examined. A soluble precursor was designed and synthesized having two tert-butoxycarbonyl solubilizing substituents at the imide moieties. This precursor molecule, NDI-Boc, is converted to the hydrogen-substituted NDI-H by heating the spin-coated precursor films. The molecular orientation during the thermal conversion of NDI-Boc to NDI-H was examined using two-dimensional grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (2D-GIXD) and p-polarized multiple-angle incidence resolution spectrometry. It was revealed that, driven by the formation of intermolecular hydrogen bonds, the molecular orientation changes from tilted edge-on to face-on orientation. In situ 2D-GIXD measurements confirmed that the change of molecular orientation is simultaneously caused by the cleaving of the Boc substituents. Time-resolved microwave conductivity measurements were used to show that the resulting NDI-H film has anisotropic charge-carrier transport with preferential mobility in the direction perpendicular to the film plane. We fabricated perovskite solar cells to demonstrate that the NDI-H film effectively functions as the bottom electron-transporting layer in these devices.

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