Universal Dependence of Carrier Mobility on Polymer Chain Length in n-Type Semiconducting Polymers
ORAL
Abstract
The dependence of electron mobility of a n-type semiconducting polymer on polymer chain length is investigated and thereby factors limiting efficient electron transport are pinpointed. Both field-effect and space-charge limited current electron mobilities are found to reach maxima at a critical degree of polymerization (DPc). This trend is shown to be similar for other n-type semiconducting polymers, suggesting a nearly universal dependence of electron mobility on polymer chain length. The underlying physics are deconvoluted: the bottleneck for DP<DPc is intercrystallite transport due to insufficient domain connectivity whereas the limiting factor for DP>DPc is intracrystallite transport due to intrachain charge localization, poor interchain hopping rate, and intracrystallite disorder. Our results argued that the basis to achieve efficient multiscale electron transport in n-type semiconducting polymers lie in the control of polymer chain length to concurrently optimize intracrystallite and intercrystallite charge transport.
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Presenters
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Duyen Tran
Chemical Engineering, University of Washington, University of Washington
Authors
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Duyen Tran
Chemical Engineering, University of Washington, University of Washington
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Amélie Robitaille
Laval University
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I Jo Hai
National Taiwan University of Science and Technology
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Yu-Cheng Chiu
National Taiwan University of Science and Technology
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Mario Leclerc
Laval University
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Samson Jenekhe
Chemical Engineering, University of Washington, University of Washington