Manipulation of intramolecular hydrogen bonds in conjugated pseudoladder polymer for semiconductivity and solution-processability†
Abstract
The conformational coplanarity and local rigidity of π-conjugated backbones are critical for the semiconducting performance of organic electronic materials. While fusing the aromatic system into a ladder-type structure effectively enhances these properties, it also often results in poor solution processability and hence limits their transition to device application. To address this challenge, an intramolecularly hydrogen-bonded pseudoladder polymer (HPLP) system based on alternating hydrogen bond donating benzobisimidazole (BBI) and hydrogen bond accepting benzodifuran (BDF) units, is designed and synthesized. A Boc-protected precursor of HPLP allows for feasible solution processing of the polymer into thin films. Subsequently, in situ thermal Boc-deprotection generates the HPLP polymer, in which intramolecular hydrogen bonds form between each pair of neighboring repeating units, inducing coplanarity and rigidity throughout the entire backbone. This process is accompanied by a significant red-shift of the absorption spectrum, reduced bandgap, and enhanced rigidity, as confirmed by NMR, UV-Vis, and density functional theory analyses. HPLP films exhibit a three-order-of-magnitude enhancement in charge carrier mobility compared to the Boc-protected precursor and demonstrate excellent solvent resistance in organic thin-film transistors.
- This article is part of the themed collection: Newly emerged organic optoelectronics: materials and devices