Synthesis of Organic Semiconductors

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Design criteria

  • HOMO/LUMO levels and bandgap

-Controlled by type of conjugated system, electron donating/electron withdrawing groups

  • Solid state packing/self-assembly

-Presence and position of substituents

  • Solubility

-Introduction of substituents

  • Volatility
  • Ease of synthesis

HOMO/LUMO level control

  • The HOMO increases in energy with increasing conjugation length.
  • The LUMO decreases in energy with increasing conjugation length.
  • The band gap (Eg) is decreases with increasing conjugation length.
  • Polymer is more susceptible to electrophiles because of its higher HOMO. ie. more reactive.


Effect of electron donating and electron withdrawing substituents

Electron donating groups increase the energy levels.

Electron withdrawing groups decrease the energy levels.


Effect of polymer structure

Twists in the structure generally decrease the effective conjugation length and therefore increase the bandgap.

Substituents

Bulky substituents will increase solubility making the material easier to process.

However, in the solid state, bulky substituents will disrupt the packing of molecules/polymers therefore decreasing charge mobility through materials.


The substituent often has to be altered through trial and error to obtain material with the appropriate HOMO/LUMO levels, solubility, and optoelectronic performance.


P-type small molecule/oligomer synthesis

Examples of p-type molecules: Pentacene

Excellent TFT performance Best TFTs give > 5 cm2/(V s), ION/IOFF = 106

Insoluble: Devices fabricated by vacuum sublimation

Pentacene is oxygen and light sensitive


Efforts to solubilize pentacene: Silyl modified pentacene

Solution processed TFTs: > 5 cm2/(V s)

see Anthony 2001[1] see Park 2006 [2]


Soluble precursor approach

Combines best of both worlds by providing material that is soluble, but has good packing once solubilizing group is removed. OTFTs

= 0.1 cm2 / V⋄s

ION / IOFF = 2⋄105


Weidkamp, K. P.; Afzali, A.; Tromp, R. M.; and Hamers, R. J. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2004, 126, 12740. Afzali, A.; Dimitrakopoulos, C. D.; Breen, T. L. J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2002, 124, 8812.


Examples of p-type molecules: Oligothiophenes

Introduce substituents to * position to provide solubility

Dihexylsexithiophene Packing aided by liquid crystalline-like behavior of alkyl chains Sparingly soluble in �hot organic solvents

see Lovinger 1998[3]


Soluble precursor route

Precursor is highly soluble in organic solvents Heating burns off the solubilizing groups, anneals thiophenes into terraced structures

OTFTs: = 0.05 cm2 / V⋄s; ION / IOFF = 105 after thermal treatment

see Murphy 2004 [4]


N-type small molecule/oligomer synthesis

N-type materials

Most organic materials are p-type.

Two procedures are generally used to make a material n-type.

-Decrease LUMO level of material by introducing electron withdrawing groups eg. naphthalene derivatives

-Decrease LUMO level by introducing strain eg. C60 derivatives


Examples of n-type molecules: Aromatic bis-imides

One of the early organic n-FET successes.

Katz, H. E.; Lovinger, A. J.; Johnson, J.; Kloc, C.; Slegrist, T.; Li, W.; Lin, Y. Y.; Dodabalapur, A. Nature 2000, 404, 478

F. Würthner; V. Stepanenko; Z. Chen; C. R. Saha-Möller; N. Kocher; D. Stalke J. Org. Chem. 2004, 69, 7933.


Examples of n-type molecules: Fluorinated pentacene

Review of polymers

see Y. Sakamoto; T. Suzukil; M. Kobayashi; Y. Gao; Y. Fukai; Y. Inoue; F. Sato; S. Tokito J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2004, 126, 8138–8140.


P-type polymer synthesis

N-type polymer synthesis

Controlled polymer synthesis

  1. J. E. Anthony; J. S. Brooks; D. L. Eaton; S. R. Parkin; J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2001, 123, 9482-9483.
  2. S. J. Park; C. C. Kuo; J. E. Anthony; T. N. Jackson; Tech. Dig. − Int. Electron Devices Meet. 2006, 113.
  3. A. J. Lovinger; H. E. Katz; A. Dodabalapur Chem. Mater., 1998, 10, 3275.
  4. A. R. Murphy; J. M. J. Fréchet; P. Chang; J. Lee; V. Subramanian J. Am. Chem. Soc., 2004, 126, 1596.