1 research outputs found
Put Your Backbone into It: Excited-State Structural Relaxation of PffBT4T-2DT Conducting Polymer in Solution
Conformational and
energetic disorder in organic semiconductors
reduces charge and exciton transport because of the structural defects,
thus reducing the efficiency in devices such as organic photovoltaics
and organic light-emitting diodes. The main structural heterogeneity
is because of the twisting of the polymer backbone that occurs even
in polymers that are mostly crystalline. Here, we explore the relationship
between polymer backbone twisting and exciton delocalization by means
of transient absorption spectroscopy and density functional theory
calculations. We study the PffBT4T-2DT polymer which has exhibited
even higher device efficiency with nonfullerene acceptors than the
current record breaking PCE11 polymer. We determine the driving force
for planarization of a polymer chain caused by excitation. The methodology
is generally applicable and demonstrates a higher penalty for nonplanar
structures in the excited state than in the ground state. This study
highlights the morphological and electronic changes in conjugated
polymers that are brought about by excitation