Enhancing Optoelectronic Anisotropy in Highly Oriented Thin Films by Fluorine Substitution in Novel Semiconducting Polymers
Journal
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces
Journal Volume
16
Journal Issue
38
Start Page
51229
End Page
51240
ISSN
1944-8244
1944-8252
Date Issued
2024-09-17
Author(s)
Shubham Sharma
Moulika Desu
Guan-Lin Chen
Kai-Wei Tseng
Kumar Vivek Gaurav
Zhe-Yu Liu
Kuang-Hao Cheng
Safalmani Pradhan
Palraj Ranganathan
Pang-Hsiao Liu
Xiang-Ling Chiu
Hirofumi Tanaka
Jyh-Chien Chen
Chin-Ti Chen
Shyam S. Pandey
DOI
10.1021/acsami.4c08566
Abstract
The recent past has witnessed remarkable progress in organic electronics, driven by the quest for flexible, lightweight, and cost-effective electronic devices. Semiconducting polymers (SCPs) have emerged as key materials in this field, offering unique electronic and optoelectronic properties along with mechanical flexibility. This study focuses on designing, synthesizing, and utilizing novel donor-acceptor (D-A) copolymer-based SCPs introducing a difluorothiophene moiety in the polymeric backbone. The importance of fluorine substitution for backbone planarity was verified by density functional theory calculations, comparing it with a nonfluorine substituted counterpart. Through the Unidirectional Floating Film Transfer Method (UFTM), we fabricated highly oriented thin films, resulting in increased optical anisotropy with dichroic ratios reaching 19.3 in PC20-FT thin films, one of the highest optical anisotropy observed for solution processable SCP thin films. X-ray diffraction and atomic force microscopy results validated the increase in the crystallinity and domain size with the increasing alkyl chain length. Finally, we elucidate these findings in the context of electrical applications by fabricating organic field-effect transistors revealing anisotropic charge transport achieving a promising mobility of 1.24 cm2V-1s-1 and mobility anisotropy of 39.5. This study offers insights into the design principles and performance optimization of SCP-based devices, paving the way for advancements in plastic electronics.
Publisher
American Chemical Society (ACS)
Type
journal article