17 research outputs found
Influence of Side Chain Interdigitation on Strain and Charge Mobility of Planar Indacenodithiophene Copolymers
Indacenodithiophene (IDT) copolymers are a class of conjugated
polymers that have limited long-range order and high hole mobilities,
which makes them promising candidates for use in deformable electronic
devices. Key to their high hole mobilities is the coplanar monomer
repeat units within the backbone. Poly(indacenodithiophene-benzothiadiazole)
(PIDTC16-BT) and poly(indacenodithiophene-thiapyrollodione)
(PIDTC16-TPDC1) are two IDT copolymers with
planar backbones, but they are brittle at low molecular weight and
have unsuitably high elastic moduli. Substitution of the hexadecane
(C16) side chains of the IDT monomer with isocane (C20) side chains was performed to generate a new BT-containing
IDT copolymer: PIDTC20-BT. Substitution of the methyl (C1) side chain on the TPD monomer for an octyl (C8) and 6-ethylundecane (C13B) afford two new TPD-containing
IDT copolymers named PIDTC16-TPDC8 and PIDTC16-TPDC13B, respectively. Both PIDTC16-TPDC8 and PIDTC16-TPDC13B are relatively
well deformable, have a low yield strain, and display significantly
reduced elastic moduli. These mechanical properties manifest themselves
because the lengthened side chains extending from the TPD-monomer
inhibit precise intermolecular ordering. In PIDTC16-BT,
PIDTC20-BT and PIDTC16-TPDC1 side
chain ordering can occur because the side chains are only present
on the IDT subunit, but this results in brittle thin films. In contrast,
PIDTC16-TPDC8 and PIDTC16-TPDC13B have disordered side chains, which seems to lead to low
hole mobilities. These results suggest that disrupting the interdigitation
in IDT copolymers through comonomer side chain extension leads to
more ductile thin films with lower elastic moduli, but decreased hole
mobility because of altered local order in the respective thin films.
Our work, thus, highlights the trade-off between molecular packing
structure for deformable electronic materials and provides guidance
for designing new conjugated polymers for stretchable electronics