Cation‐Dependent Mixed Ionic‐Electronic Transport in a Perylenediimide Small‐Molecule Semiconductor

Author:

Yu Simiao1,Wu Han‐Yan2,Lemaur Vincent3,Kousseff Christina J.1,Beljonne David3,Fabiano Simone2,Nielsen Christian B.1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Chemistry Queen Mary University of London Mile End Road London E1 4NS UK

2. Laboratory of Organic Electronics Department of Science and Technology Linköping University SE-601 74 Norrköping Sweden

3. Laboratory for Chemistry of Novel Materials Materials Research Institute University of Mons Place du Parc 20 Mons BE-7000 Belgium

Abstract

AbstractA rapidly growing interest in organic bioelectronic applications has spurred the development of a wide variety of organic mixed ionic‐electronic conductors. While these new mixed conductors have enabled the community to interface organic electronics with biological systems and efficiently transduce biological signals (ions) into electronic signals, the current materials selection does not offer sufficient selectivity towards specific ions of biological relevance without the use of auxiliary components such as ion‐selective membranes. Here, we present the molecular design of an n‐type (electron‐transporting) perylene diimide semiconductor material decorated with pendant oligoether groups to facilitate interactions with cations such as Na+ and K+. Using the cyclic 15‐crown‐5 oligoether motif, we find that the resulting mixed conductor PDI‐crown displays a strong dependence on the size of the electrolyte cation when tested in an organic electrochemical transistor configuration. In stark contrast to the low current response on the order of 1 μA observed with aqueous sodium chloride, a nearly 200‐fold increase in current is observed with aqueous potassium chloride. We ascribe the high selectivity to extended molecular aggregation and therefore efficient charge transport in the presence of K+ due to a favourable sandwich‐like structure between two adjacent 15‐crown‐5 motifs and the potassium ion.

Publisher

Wiley

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