1 research outputs found
Interlayer Sliding Phonon Drives Phase Transition in the Ph‑BTBT-10 Organic Semiconductor
In the field of organic
electronics, the semiconductor 7-decyl-2-phenyl[1]benzothieno[3,2-b][1]benzothiophene (Ph-BTBT-10) has become a benchmark
due to its high charge mobility and chemical stability in thin film
devices. Its phase diagram is characterized by a crystal phase with
a bilayer structure that at high temperature transforms into a Smectic
E liquid crystal with monolayer structure. As the charge transport
properties appear to depend on the phase present in the thin film,
the transition has been the subject of structural and computational
studies. Here such a process has been investigated by polarized low
frequency Raman spectroscopy, selectively probing the intermolecular
dynamics of the two phases. The spectroscopic observations demonstrate
the key role played by a displacive component of the transition, with
the interpenetration of the crystal bilayers driven by lattice phonon
mode softening followed by the intralayer rearrangement of the molecule
rigid cores into the herringbone motif of the liquid crystal. The
mechanism can be related to the effectiveness of thermal annealing
to restore the crystal phase in films