Molecular packing in organic single crystals greatly influences their charge transport properties but can hardly be predicted and designed because of the complex intermolecular interactions. In this work, we have realized systematic fine-tuning of the single-crystal molecular packing of five benzodifurandione-based oligo(p-phenylenevinylene) (BDOPV)-based small molecules through incorporation of electronegative fluorine atoms on the BDOPV backbone. While these molecules all exhibit similar column stacking configurations in their single crystals, the intermolecular displacements and distances can be substantially modified by tuning of the amounts and/or the positions of the substituent fluorine atoms. Density functional theory calculations showed that the subtle differences in charge distribution or electrostatic potential induced by different fluorine substitutions play an important role in regulating the molecular packing of the BDOPV compounds. Consequently, the electronic couplings for electron transfer can vary from 71 meV in a slipped stack to 201 meV in a nearly cofacial antiparallel stack, leading to an increase in the electron mobility of the BDOPV derivatives from 2.6 to 12.6 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1). The electron mobility of the five molecules did not show a good correlation with the LUMO levels, indicating that the distinct difference in charge transport properties is a result of the molecular packing. Our work not only provides a series of high-electron-mobility organic semiconductors but also demonstrates that fluorination is an effective approach for fine-tuning of single-crystal packing modes beyond simply lowering the molecular energy levels.
Recently, polymer field‐effect transistors have gone through rapid development. Nevertheless, charge transport mechanism and structure‐property relationship are less understood. Here we use strong electron‐deficient benzodifurandione‐based poly(p‐phenylene vinylene) (BDPPV) as polymer backbone and develop six BDPPV‐based polymers (BDPPV‐C1 to C6) with various side‐chain branching positions to systematically study the side‐chain effect on device performance. All the polymers exhibited ambient‐stable n‐type transporting behaviors with the highest electron mobility of up to 1.40 cm2 V−1 s−1. The film morphologies and microstructures of all the six polymers were systematically investigated. Our results demonstrate that the interchain π–π stacking distance decreases as moving the branching position away from polymer backbones, and an unprecedentedly close π–π stacking distance down to 3.38 Å is obtained for BDPPV‐C4 to C6. Nonetheless, closer π–π stacking distance does not always correlate with higher electron mobility. Polymer crystallinity, thin film disorder, and polymer packing conformation, which all influenced by side‐chain branching position, are proved to show significant influence on device performance. Our study not only reveals that π–π stacking distance is not the decisive factor on carrier mobility in conjugated polymers but also demonstrates that side‐chain branching position engineering is a powerful strategy to modulate and balance these factors in conjugated polymers.
A strong, electron-deficient small molecule, F4 -BDOPV, has a lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) level down to -4.44 eV and exhibits cofacial packing in single crystals. These features provide F4 -BDOPV with good ambient stability and large charge-transfer integrals for electrons, leading to a high electron mobility of up to 12.6 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) in air.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.