Yurachat
Janpatompong‡
,
Kamil
Suwada‡
,
Michael L.
Turner
* and
Guillaume
De Bo
*
Department of Chemistry, The University of Manchester, Oxford Road, Manchester, M13 9PL, UK. E-mail: michael.turner@manchester.ac.uk; guillaume.debo@manchester.ac.uk
First published on 29th March 2023
Understanding the stability of conjugated polymers towards mechanical stimuli is critical for optimizing the processing and use of these materials in a range of electronic and optoelectronic devices, such as transistors, light emitting diodes and solar cells. The fast-growing field of mechanochemistry aims to tame the destructive mechanical forces to perform specific chemical changes in mechanophores but it can also be used to probe the stability of conjugated polymers towards destructive mechanical forces. Using ultrasonication it is possible to benchmark the mechanical integrity of phenylenevinylene block copolymers and show, through experimental studies and DFT simulation, that conjugated olefins are highly stable to cis–trans isomerisation upon extensive elongation, a useful property for the development of flexible organic electronics.
Many modern consumer electronics are designed to be conformable, bent or flexed in use. This means that the individual components (i.e. transistors, diodes, resistors, capacitors) need to be mechanically robust to extension and flexing and the performance of these devices must be stable under repeated mechanical deformation.23 Semiconducting polymers often do not exhibit the same mechanical strength and toughness of traditional engineering polymers as they have rigid planar backbones that are ordered in the solid state but are surrounded by long, flexible side chains to enhance solubility, reducing the cohesive forces within thin films of these materials.24 Although the thickness of the active semiconducting layer of most flexible electronic devices is more than an order of magnitude less than that of other layers, mechanical change or damage within these layers leads to dramatic changes in device performance.25 An understanding of the destructive nature of mechanical energy on the chemical structure of conjugated polymers will help in the design of materials for mechanically robust, functional devices.
Application of elongational force to organic molecules embedded in the polymer backbone can be achieved in solution using high intensity ultrasound (as solvodynamic shear is generated in the surrounding of collapsing cavitation bubbles).26,27 This technique has been used to activate a variety of mechanophores,28 sometimes along unusual reaction pathways,29–31 prepare functional materials,32 carry out in situ catalysis,33,34 or induce the release of small molecules,35 amongst others. Here we investigate the mechanical strength of cis, trans-poly(p-phenylene vinylenes) (PPVs) under tensional force. The mechanical activation was performed in solution using high-intensity ultrasound. We anticipated the possible cis to trans isomerisation of the olefins upon elongation, a phenomenon previously observed by AFM,36,37 but we found that the structural integrity (notably the stereochemistry of the double bonds) and the optical properties are conserved upon mechanical activation. The origin of PPV mechanical strength was investigated computationally by DFT using the Constrained Geometry Simulates External Force (CoGEF) technique.28,38
Scheme 1 Synthesis (a) and mechanical activation (b) of coil–rod–coil ABA phenylene-vinylene triblock copolymers 7a and 8a. |
Incorporation of the α-bromoester end group in 5 and 6 was achieved by quenching the living ROMP of cyclophanediene 1 and 2 with 20 eq. of vinyl ether E/Z-4 (f = 96% and 76%) (Scheme 1). Polymers 5 and 6 were isolated as yellow solids after purification, in yields of 95 and 97%, respectively. The presence of the α-bromoester end groups in polymers 5 and 6 enable these polymers to be used as macroinitiators in ATRP. The PMMA–PPV–PMMA triblock copolymers 7a and 8a were prepared by copper-catalyzed ATRP of MMA at 90 °C.21,40 High molecular weight PMMA segments (Scheme 1) were obtained after heating for 16 and 15 hours, respectively. The polymerization was terminated by exposure of the reaction to air and the polymeric products were isolated by precipitation into methanol, followed by reprecipitation into diethyl ether from chloroform.
The molecular weights of 7a and 8a were determined by size exclusion chromatography (Table 1) in THF, calibrated using polystyrene standards. The number average molar masses (Mn) determined by SEC were 64.3 (Đ = 1.40) and 79.3 kDa (Đ = 1.41) for 7a and 8a, respectively. The 1H NMR spectra of triblock copolymers 7a and 8a are shown in Fig. S5–8.† Resonances relating to PPV and PMMA segments are apparent, with the key signals assigned for each block. The resonances below 2.00 ppm are associated with the 2-(R/S) ethylhexyl and alkyl side chain and the C–CH3 and CH2 of the PMMA segment. An approximate degree of polymerization for the PMMA segment was calculated by integration of the OMe group of MMA (δ = 3.17–3.98 ppm) against the combined phenyl and vinylene protons for 7a (δ = 6.40–7.53 ppm) and methylene protons for 8a (δ = 2.16–2.86 ppm) respectively. The degree of polymerization of the PMMA segment determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy allowed for an absolute Mn value to be calculated (see Table 1). The discrepancy between the apparent Mn from SEC and the absolute Mn calculated from 1H NMR spectroscopy is due to the difference in hydrodynamic volume between the triblock copolymer and the PS standards.41
x n (PPV)a | x n (PMMA)b | M n (kg mol−1) | Đ | M n (kg mol−1) | λ max (nm) | λ em (nm) | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
a From [5]/[catalyst 3] or [6]/[catalyst 3]. b Determined by 1H NMR spectroscopy. c Determined by SEC with RI detection (calibrated against narrow Đ PS standards). | |||||||
5 | — | — | 5.86 | 1.24 | 5.19 | 451 | 527 |
6 | — | — | 6.24 | 1.32 | 4.72 | 382 | 495 |
7a | 10 | 806 | 64.31 | 1.40 | 85.85 | 452 | 528 |
7b | 10 | 806 | 25.08 | 1.42 | — | 452 | 528 |
8a | 10 | 958 | 79.30 | 1.41 | 100.55 | 374 | 493 |
8b | 10 | 960 | 25.69 | 1.34 | — | 374 | 493 |
Mechanochemical activation of the polymers 7a and 8a was performed by ultrasonication (20 kHz, 15.6 W cm−2, 1 s on/2 s off) of dilute (∼2 mg mL−1) polymer solutions in the dark, while maintaining the temperature between 5 and 10 °C. The complete cleavage of both polymers was observed after 120 min of sonication (Fig. 1a, Mn = 25.1 and 25.7 kDa for 7b and 8b respectively). This transformation was indicative of the destructive mechanical forces acting on the triblock copolymer backbone, resulting in covalent bond scissions in the PMMA blocks. Despite the broad dispersity of polymers 7a and 8a (Đ ∼1.4), the PPV block should be placed in the central region of the block copolymer in most of the chains. In any case, as force is distributed along the backbone (with its highest intensity in the centre), it is possible to activate a mechanophore that is located off-centre,42,43 especially for a low-force process such as olefin isomerisation (which typically occur ∼1 nN).36,37
The 1H NMR spectra of 7a,b and 8a,b pre- and post-sonication showed no substantional changes in the olefin signals (Fig. 1c and Fig. S5–8†), indicating that no cis, trans isomerisation occurred in the PPV block during sonication. This was also confirmed by the absorption and emission spectra of rod–coil triblock copolymer 7 (Fig. 1b), which show no difference between pre- and post-sonication samples (7a and 7b). The UV-vis spectrum exhibits a λmax of 452 nm, with a PLmax at 528 nm while polymer 8 shows a λmax of 374 nm and a PLmax at 493 which is blue shifted from 7 (Table 1).
As the mechanical elongation led to polymer backbone degradation before chemical changes could occur at the PPV block, the scission very likely occurred within the PMMA backbone. To gain better understanding of the PPV moiety under stress, calculations were performed on models of polymers 7a (Fig. 2 and 3) and 8a (Fig. S1†), which were constructed from the initiator and one ROMP monomer unit on each side, capped by pivalate moiety simulating the PMMA attachment point (7′ and 8′, respectively). The elongation of these models was simulated by incrementally increasing the distance between the anchor atoms and optimizing the geometry at each step (CoGEF, DFT B3LYP 6-31G+ (d′, 3p′) level of theory in Gaussian 16). Both models experience a high degree of deformation upon simulated elongation before the scission of a terminal bond is observed (Fig. 2c), which is indicative of a non-selective scission within PMMA block. Both 7′ and 8′ show a similar Fmax value of 5.5 nN (Fig. 2c and S1†), while CoGEF simulation of a PPV segment derived from 7′ (i.e. without pivalate groups, see ESI†) leads to the scission of the C–C bond separating the cis-olefin from the substituent-free ring at a considerably higher force of 6.9 nN, which is beyond the force required to cleave the PMMA backbone (see ESI†).
Remarkably, no isomerisation takes place during the elongation (Fig. 3). Instead, the simulated force led to the distortion of trans-olefins from 129° up to 140° (angle ABC), while the cis-olefins have bent from 131° to nearly 162° (angle EFG) at Emax (i, Fig. 2c and d) for 7′. Moreover, the ring-adjacent bonds (e.g. AB) elongated from ∼1.46 Å to as high as 1.65 Å, while the vinylene bonds (e.g. BC) elongated from ∼1.35 Å up to 1.44 Å. Unsurprisingly, the cis-olefins experienced a higher level of distortion than the trans-isomers. The rings themselves experience a lower deformation as cross-ring distance D–E elongates from 2.86 Å up to 3.09 Å for example. Taken together these observations explain why the PPV polymers do not isomerise during stretching, as the elongational force applied during sonication does not provide the torsional momentum (i.e. the opening of dihedral angle EFGH) required to flip the olefins from Z to E stereochemistry.
Footnotes |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. See DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d3py00021d |
‡ These authors contributed equally. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2023 |