Observation of a Distinct
Surface Molecular Orientation
in Films of a High Mobility Conjugated Polymer
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Abstract
The molecular orientation and microstructure of films
of the high-mobility
semiconducting polymer poly(<i>N</i>,<i>N</i>-bis-2-octyldodecylnaphthalene-1,4,5,8-bis-dicarboximide-2,6-diyl-alt-5,5-2,2-bithiophene)
(P(NDI2OD-T2)) are probed using a combination of grazing-incidence
wide-angle X-ray scattering (GIWAXS) and near-edge X-ray absorption
fine-structure (NEXAFS) spectroscopy. In particular a novel approach
is used whereby the bulk molecular orientation and surface molecular
orientation are simultaneously measured on the same sample using NEXAFS
spectroscopy in an angle-resolved transmission experiment. Furthermore,
the acquisition of bulk-sensitive NEXAFS data enables a direct comparison
of the information provided by GIWAXS and NEXAFS. By comparison of
the bulk-sensitive and surface-sensitive NEXAFS data, a distinctly
different molecular orientation is observed at the surface of the
film compared to the bulk. While a more “face-on” orientation
of the conjugated backbone is observed in the bulk of the film, consistent
with the lamella orientation observed by GIWAXS, a more “edge-on”
orientation is observed at the surface of the film with surface-sensitive
NEXAFS spectroscopy. This distinct edge-on surface orientation explains
the high in-plane mobility that is achieved in top-gate P(NDI2OD-T2)
field-effect transistors (FETs), while the bulk face-on texture explains
the high out-of-plane mobilities that are observed in time-of-flight
and diode measurements. These results also stress that GIWAXS lacks
the surface sensitivity required to probe the microstructure of the
accumulation layer that supports charge transport in organic FETs
and hence may not necessarily be appropriate for correlating film
microstructure and FET charge transport