On the Importance of Chemical Precision in Organic Electronics: Fullerene Intercalation in Perfectly Alternating Conjugated Polymers

Author:

Vanderspikken Jochen123ORCID,Liu Zhen4,Wu Xiaocui5ORCID,Beckers Omar123ORCID,Moro Stefania6ORCID,Quill Tyler James7ORCID,Liu Quan123,Goossens Arwin123ORCID,Marks Adam7ORCID,Weaver Karrie8ORCID,Hamid Mouna9,Goderis Bart9ORCID,Nies Erik9ORCID,Lemaur Vincent10ORCID,Beljonne David10ORCID,Salleo Alberto7ORCID,Lutsen Laurence123ORCID,Vandewal Koen123ORCID,Van Mele Bruno4ORCID,Costantini Giovanni6ORCID,Van den Brande Niko4ORCID,Maes Wouter123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Institute for Materials Research (IMO) Hasselt University Agoralaan Diepenbeek 3590 Belgium

2. IMEC Associated Lab IMOMEC Wetenschapspark 1 Diepenbeek 3590 Belgium

3. Energyville Thorpark Genk 3600 Belgium

4. Vrije Universiteit Brussel Physical Chemistry and Polymer Science Pleinlaan 2 Brussels 1050 Belgium

5. Department of Chemistry University of Warwick Gibbet Hill Road Coventry CV4 7AL UK

6. School of Chemistry University of Birmingham Edgbaston Birmingham B15 2TT UK

7. Department of Materials Science and Engineering Stanford University Stanford CA 94305 USA

8. Department of Earth System Science Stanford University Stanford CA 94305 USA

9. KU Leuven Polymer Chemistry and Materials Division Celestijnenlaan 200F Heverlee 3001 Belgium

10. Laboratory for Chemistry of Novel Materials Materials Research Institute University of Mons (UMONS) 20 Place du Parc Mons B‐7000 Belgium

Abstract

AbstractThe true structure of alternating conjugated polymers—the state‐of‐the‐art materials for many organic electronics—often deviates from the idealized picture. Homocoupling defects are in fact inherent to the widely used cross‐coupling polymerization methods. Nevertheless, many polymers still perform excellently in the envisaged applications, which raises the question if one should really care about these imperfections. This article looks at the relevance of chemical precision (and lack thereof) in conjugated polymers covering the entire spectrum from the molecular scale, to the micro and mesostructure, up to the device level. The different types of polymerization errors for the alkoxylated variant of the benchmark (semi)crystalline polymer poly[2,5‐bis(3‐tetradecylthiophen‐2‐yl)thieno[3,2‐b]thiophene (PBTTT) are identified, visualized, and quantified and a general strategy to avoid homocoupling is introduced. Through a combination of experiments and supported by simulations, it is shown that these coupling defects hinder fullerene intercalation and limit device performance as compared to the homocoupling‐free analog. This clearly demonstrates that structural defects do matter and should be generally avoided, in particular when the geometrical regularity of the polymer is essential. These insights likely go beyond the specific PBTTT derivatives studied here and are of general relevance for the wider organic electronics field.

Funder

Rotary Foundation

Oak Ridge Institute for Science and Education

SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory

U.S. Department of Energy

Office of Science

Basic Energy Sciences

National Science Foundation

European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Electrochemistry,Condensed Matter Physics,Biomaterials,Electronic, Optical and Magnetic Materials

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