4.8 Article

Systematic Investigation of Side-Chain Branching Position Effect on Electron Carrier Mobility in Conjugated Polymers

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 24, Issue 40, Pages 6270-6278

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.201401822

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Major State Basic Research Development Program from the Ministry of Science and Technology [2013CB933501]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China

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Recently, polymer field-effect transistors have gone through rapid development. Nevertheless, charge transport mechanism and structure-property relationship are less understood. Here we use strong electron-deficient benzodifurandione-based poly(p-phenylene vinylene) (BDPPV) as polymer backbone and develop six BDPPV-based polymers (BDPPV-C1 to C6) with various side-chain branching positions to systematically study the side-chain effect on device performance. All the polymers exhibited ambient-stable n-type transporting behaviors with the highest electron mobility of up to 1.40 cm 2 V-1 s(-1). The film morphologies and microstructures of all the six polymers were systematically investigated. Our results demonstrate that the interchain pi-pi stacking distance decreases as moving the branching position away from polymer backbones, and an unprecedentedly close pi-pi stacking distance down to 3.38 angstrom is obtained for BDPPV-C4 to C6. Nonetheless, closer pi-pi stacking distance does not always correlate with higher electron mobility. Polymer crystallinity, thin film disorder, and polymer packing conformation, which all influenced by side-chain branching position, are proved to show significant influence on device performance. Our study not only reveals that pi-pi stacking distance is not the decisive factor on carrier mobility in conjugated polymers but also demonstrates that side-chain branching position engineering is a powerful strategy to modulate and balance these factors in conjugated polymers.

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