2017
DOI: 10.1002/adma.201701072
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Unraveling the Solution‐State Supramolecular Structures of Donor–Acceptor Polymers and their Influence on Solid‐State Morphology and Charge‐Transport Properties

Abstract: Polymer self-assembly in solution prior to film fabrication makes solution-state structures critical for their solid-state packing and optoelectronic properties. However, unraveling the solution-state supramolecular structures is challenging, not to mention establishing a clear relationship between the solution-state structure and the charge-transport properties in field-effect transistors. Here, for the first time, it is revealed that the thin-film morphology of a conjugated polymer inherits the features of i… Show more

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Cited by 138 publications
(196 citation statements)
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References 67 publications
(71 reference statements)
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“…[6a] It has to be emphasized that dissolved polymers will often exist in the form of solution-state supramolecular polymer aggregates. [12] The growth of these dissolved aggregates from a fully molecularly dissolved state has been explained by the disorder-order transition model [13] and multi-level self-assembly processes. [14] For conjugated polymers, the molecularly dissolved state is characterized by a single broad absorption peak in the UV/Vis-NIR absorption spectrum, while upon aggregation, a red-shift is observed due to planarization of the polymer backbone, accompanied by the appearance of vibronic peaks or shoulders.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[6a] It has to be emphasized that dissolved polymers will often exist in the form of solution-state supramolecular polymer aggregates. [12] The growth of these dissolved aggregates from a fully molecularly dissolved state has been explained by the disorder-order transition model [13] and multi-level self-assembly processes. [14] For conjugated polymers, the molecularly dissolved state is characterized by a single broad absorption peak in the UV/Vis-NIR absorption spectrum, while upon aggregation, a red-shift is observed due to planarization of the polymer backbone, accompanied by the appearance of vibronic peaks or shoulders.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…[13c] No significant change was observed between the solution to thin film states of LPPVs, and may result from their rigid backbones or pre-aggregation behaviors in solution. [19] Compared with LPPV-2, LPPV-1 showed about a3 0nmb athochromic shift both in solution and in solid-state films,suggesting their different aggregation behaviors. [20] Thee nergy levels of LPPVs were estimated by cyclic voltammetry (CV).…”
Section: Angewandte Chemiementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Morphology control is crucial to achieving high‐performance devices and to elucidating the complex structure–charge transport property relationship . Morphology is shown to be highly sensitive to processing conditions, such as printing/coating speed, solvent choices, substrate chemistry and topology, and so on. It has been widely shown that morphological parameters can modulate charge carrier mobility by orders of magnitude.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%