Asymmetric Regio-regular Conjugated Polymers for Electronic Applications
20170002125 ยท 2017-01-05
Assignee
Inventors
Cpc classification
C08J2365/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
C08J2341/00
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
Abstract
A polymer consisting of a regio-regular polymer backbone basing on asymmetric fluorine-substituted 2,1,3-benzothiadiazole units (FBT) having a Formula 1MP0:
##STR00001##
where. R1 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; R2 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons: n is any number greater than 6; D is an aryl moiety.
Claims
1. A polymer consisting of a regio-regular polymer backbone basing on asymmetric fluorine-substituted 2,1,3-benzothiadiazole units (FBT) having a Formula 1MP0: ##STR00012## In the above formula-1MP0, R1 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; R2 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; n is any number greater than 6; D is an aryl moiety.
2. A polymer of claim 1, where D is alkyl substituted cyclopenta[2,1-b:3,4-b]dithiophene(CDT), having a Formula-1MP1, ##STR00013## where, R1 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons R2 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; R3 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; R4 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; n is any number greater than 6;
3. A polymer of claim 1, where D is hexadecyl substituted cyclopenta[2.1-b:3.4-b]dithiophene(CDT), and R1R2=hexadecyl, have a defined structure of Formula 1MP2, ##STR00014## where n is any number greater than 6.
4. A film formed from a solvent solution contains the polymer of claim 1.
5. A device made from a film contains the polymer of claim 1.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWING
[0024]
[0025]
[0026]
[0027]
[0028]
DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION
[0029] The polymer of the invention is of a regio-regular polymer backbone basing on asymmetric fluorine-substituted 2,1,3-benzothiadiazole units (FBT) as schematically illustrated in Formula 1MP0:
##STR00006##
[0030] In the above Formula-1MP0. [0031] R1 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; [0032] R2 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; [0033] n is any number greater than 6; [0034] D is an aryl moiety.
[0035] D is an aryl moiety, and preferably D is an electron-rich aromatic units which can work as an electronic donor when coupling with the asymmetric fluorine-substituted 2,1,3-benzothiadiazole unit (FBT) as illustrated in Formula-1MP0. Such a D can be selected from substituted or unsubstituted aryl or heteroaryl groups, such as C.sub.6-C.sub.30 substituted or unsubstituted aryl or heteroaryl groups. Examples of such groups include, but are not limited to, thiophene, pyrrole, furan, phenyl, phosphole, benzodithiophene, spirofluorene, spirothiophene, bithiophene, terthiophene, thienothiophene, dithienothiophene, benzothiophene, isobenzothiophene, benzodithiophene, cyclopentadithiophene, silacyclopentadiene, silacyclopentadienebithiophene, indole, benzene, naphthalene, anthracene, perylene, indene, fluorene, pyrene, azulene, pyridine, oxazole, thiazole, thiazine, pyrimidine, pyrazine, imidazole, benzoxazole, benzoxadiazole, benzothiazole, benzimidazole, benzofuran, isobenzofuran, thiadiazole, dithienopyrrole, dithieno phosphole and carbazole.
[0036] In one embodiment, the D moiety is cyclopenta[2.1-b:3,4-b]dithiophene(CDT), thus the Formula 1MP0 yields a specific class of polymers with a specific Formula-1MP1.
##STR00007##
[0037] In the above Formula-1MP1, [0038] R1 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; [0039] R2 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; [0040] R3 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; [0041] R4 is any alkyl group of 1-30 carbons; [0042] n is any number greater than 6;
[0043] In Formula 1MP1, each of R1, R2, R3 and R4 is independently selected from an alkyl group of 1-30 carbons. Examples of such alkyl groups include, but are not limited to, methyl, ethyl, propyl, butyl, pentyl, hexyl, heptyl, octyl, nonyl, decyl, undecyl, dodecyl, hexadecyl, ocosyl, triacontyl, iso-propyl, iso-butyl, 2-ethylhexyl, 2-butylhexyl, 2-butyloctyl, 2-hexyloctyl, 2-hexyldecyl, 2-hexyldodecyl, 2-octyldecyl, 2-octyldodecyl, 2-octyltetradecyl, 2-octylhexadecyl, 2-decyldodecyl, 2-decyltetradecyl, 2-decylhexadecyl, 2-dodecyltetradecyl, 2-dodecylhexadecyl, 2-dodecyloctadecyl.
[0044] In one embodiment, R1, R2, R3 and R4 are the same alkyl group of hexadecyl, thus the Formula 1MP1 yields a specific polymer, 1MP2 as illustrated in structure below.
##STR00008##
[0045] In terms of chemical configuration, 1MP2 is distinguished from its isomers 1MP2-X and 1MP2-Y as depicted in Scheme-3 because of the asymmetric nature of fluorine-substituted 2,1,3-benzothiadiazole unit (FBT).
[0046] As shown in
##STR00009## ##STR00010##
[0047] Therefore, it is another objective of this invention to teach the synthetic pathway to prepare regio-regular asymmetric conjugated polymers in a controllable manner. According to this invention, the desirable asymmetric configuration is pre-assembled before poly-condensation.
[0048] For instance, an asymmetric acceptor unit of 1T1089 was first prepared before coupling with the donor unit of 1T0952. As such, the desirable regio-regular asymmetric conjugated polymers manner can be prepared in a controllable, and the resulted polymers are novel with desirable properties.
[0049] Overall, the polymers of Formula 1MP0 are the novel compounds which have a polymeric backbone containing are-assembled asymmetric unit of Formula-2FBT-CDT.
##STR00011##
[0050] It is the polymeric backbone consisting of a pre-assembled asymmetric unit of Formula-2FBT-CDT which renders the polymer 1MP0 shown above a new composition of matter. The pre-assembled asymmetric unit of Formula-2FBT-CDT in the invented polymers offers the desirable LUMO and HOMO energy levels, the energy gap, and also the absorption spectra.
[0051] It is also the designed alkyl groups on the CDT unit which render the polymer 1MP0 shown above a new composition of matter. Such alkyl groups offers the desirable solubility in common organic solvents in order to make a thin film from its solution and also render the formed film to have optimal morphology, thus yields a higher charge mobility as well.
[0052] The novel semiconducting polymer of formula 1MP0 can be synthesized by a convenient poly-condensation methods know to these skilled in the art, but the asymmetric unit of Formula-2FBT-CDT needs to be pre-assembled. For example,
[0053] In the example which follows, the specific preparation of 1MP2 by Stille Coupling reaction (
EXAMPLE 1
[0054] Preparation of the asymmetric acceptor unit of 1T1089 (an example of 2FBT-CDT) 1T1089, an asymmetric 2FBT-CDT intermediate, was prepared following a reaction scheme as illustrated in
[0055]
EXAMPLE 2
[0056] Preparation of an Asymmetric Regio-Regular Conjugated Polymer (1MP2)
[0057] As an example, a symmetric regio-regular conjugated polymer, 1MP2 was prepared following a reaction scheme as illustrated in
[0058] GPC(Eluted in CHCl.sub.3, Polystyrene as standard) analysis of 1MP2 yielded the following: Mw=120000, Mn=5000 and PDI=2.4.
EXAMPLE 3
[0059] Typical Characters of 1MP2
[0060] The polymer obtained in EXAMPLE 2 was found to be fully soluble in common organic solvents. The solvents examined include chloroform, tetrahydrofuran (THF), chlorobenezene, ortho-dichlorobenzene, dimethyl glutarate and dimethyl succinate. For example, 2% % vt/vol solution of 1MP2 in chlorobenzene was readily made by dissolving the polymer prepared in EXAMPLE-2 at room temperature. The 1MP2 solutions are dark purple colored.
[0061] The thin film of 1MP2 can be formed by drop casting or by spin casting from 1MP2 solution, which yielded an uniform film of metallic shined blue-purple color. Films can also be readily formed on other substrates, such as quartz, silicon wafer, PET, and ITO (indium-tin oxide coated glass).
[0062]
[0063]
EXAMPLE 5
[0064] Application of 1MP2 in OPV
[0065] In this example, the electron acceptor PC.sub.71BM and the cathode interface material poly [(9,9-bis(3-(N,N-dimethylamino)propyl)-2,7-fluorene)-alt-2,7-(9,9dioctylfluorene)] (PFN) are commercially available from I-Material Inc. The polymer 1MP2 prepared in EXAMPLE 2 and PC.sub.71BM in the weight ratio of 1:1.5 were co-dissolved in a solvent mixture of 97% (vol/vol) chlorobenzene and 3% (vol/vol) 1,8-diiodooctane with a concentrations of 10 mg/ml of polymer and 15 mg/ml of PC.sub.71BM respectively. The poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiopene):poly-(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS, Clevios P A14083) used was obtained from H.C. Starck Clevios GmbH.
[0066] An invert OPV device was fabricated with a device structure of ITO/PFN/1MP2: PC.sub.71BM/MoO.sub.3/Al, as described in Reference (Zhicai He, et al., Nature Photonics. 9, 174(2015)). Before the deposition of the photoactive layer, PFN thin layer was coated at the top of the precleaned ITO substrate (treated by oxygen plasma cleaning for 4 mins) by spin casting from the methanol solution at 2000 r.p.m. for 1 min, forming a thin interlayer with an initial thickness of 10 nm. The thickness of the interlayer was determined by a surface profiler (Alfa Step-500, Tencor), in conjunction with extrapolation from an absorbance-thickness curve that assumes a linear dependence of absorbance at 380 nm on film thickness. The PFN solution was prepared by dissolving the solid in methanol (anhydrous grade, 99.8%) under the presence of small amount of acetic acid (2-20 l/ml depending on molecular weight of PFN). The typical concentration of PFN solution for spin-coating is 2 me/ml. Following the deposition of PFN interlayer, the 1MP2:PC.sub.71BM active blend layer, with nominal thickness around 100 nm, was prepared by spin-coating the mixed solvent of chlorobenzene/1,8-diiodoctane (97%:3% by volume) solution (with a total concentration of 25 me/ml, as described previously) at 1000 r.p.m. for 2 min. The resulted photoactive layer was dried in vacuum for 3 hours before electrode deposition. A 10 nm MoO.sub.3 layer and a 100 nm Al layer were subsequently were evaporated through a shadow mask to define the active area of the devices (28 mm.sup.2) and form top anode.
[0067] The fabricated device was encapsulated in a nitrogen filled glove box by UV epoxy and cover glass. The current density-voltage (J-V) curves were measured using Keithley 2400 source-measure unit. The photocurrent was measured under AM 1.5 G illumination at 100 mW/cm.sup.2 under a solar simulator. The light intensity was determined by a mono-silicon detector calibrated by National Renewable Energy Laboratory (NREL).
[0068]
EXAMPLE 5
[0069] Application of 1MP2 in OTFT
[0070] The polymeric thin film transistor with high orientation was fabricated following the reported procedure (Chan Luo, et al., Nano Lett., 2014, 14, 2764-2771). TFT mobility was derived from the saturated operation regime by using the formula-OTFT:
I.sub.DS=(W/2L)C.sub.ph(VGSV.sub.TH).sup.2 Formula-OTFT:
where W/L is the channel width/length, C is the capacitance of dielectric layer per unit area were measured for the native substrate and the substrate with nano-grooves (10.0 nFcm.sup.2 and 11.5 nF cm.sup.2), respectively. V.sub.GS and V.sub.TH are the gate-source voltage and the threshold voltage, respectively.
[0071] Using the formula-OTFT, the charge mobility was calculated under different electric field (V.sub.DS) and listed in Table-1. Remarkably, a high charge mobility of 100(cm2V.sup.1S.sup.1) was approached with the increase of electric field. This is the highest charge mobility for a polymeric material ever reported.
TABLE-US-00001 TABLE 1 Charge mobility of 1MP2 under different V.sub.DS V.sub.DS(V) 0.5 1 2 5 10 20 40 80 120 Mobility 0.4 1.2 2.7 8.1 18.9 39.3 64.3 78.5 93.1 (cm2V.sup.1 S.sup.1)
[0072] It is now understood that various modifications of the invention are contemplated and can be resorted to those skilled in the art without departing from the spirit and scope of the invention as defined in the following claims.
REFERENCE CITED
Patent Documents
[0073] WO 2005/014691 A2, 02/2005 Koller, et al
[0074] WO 2006/107740 A2, 10/2006 Mccullough, et al
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[0076] WO 2008/092490 A1, 08/2008 Hoffart, et al
[0077] WO 2009/056496 A1, 05/2009 Rieke, et al
Non Patent Documents
[0078] He, Z. C, et al. Nature Photonics, 9, 174 (2015)
[0079] Chen, H. Y., et al., Adv. Mater., 22, 371(2010)
[0080] Albercht., et al., JACS, 134, 14932(2012)
[0081] Chen., et al., Nature Photonics, 3, 649(2009)
[0082] Tseng, et al., Nano Lett., 12, 6353(2012)
[0083] Luo, C, et al., Nano Lett., 14, 2764(2014)