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The Role of Polymer Crystallization and Counterions in the Formation of Polarons and Bipolarons in Chemically-Doped Semiconducting Polymers

POSTER

Abstract

It is well established that chemical doping not only introduces polarons in conjugated polymers but also induces ordering, particularly if the polymer is initially amorphous. However, the connections between crystallization energy and the doping-induced creation of polarons and bipolarons is still unclear. In this talk, we unravel the details of how doping and (bi)polaron formation are connected to crystallinity by studying chemically-doped PProDOT-Hx2. PProDOT-Hx2 is an amorphous polymer in its pristine state, but its structure changes when doped with molecular dopants such as F4TCNQ, TCNQ, FeCl3 and large dopants based on dodecaborane clusters. Electrochemically, PProDOT-Hx2 is ~200 mV easier to oxidize than P3HT due to the presence of the electron-donating O atoms in conjugation with the backbone. We find, however, that PProDOT-Hx2 can be doped by dopant solutions with concentrations orders of magnitude smaller than those used to dope P3HT. For example, UV-vis-NIR spectroscopy shows that the bandgap absorption of PProDOT-Hx2 is entirely bleached even when very modest concentrations of F4TCNQ are applied, achieving conductivities up to 18 S/cm. We also see that PProDOT-Hx2 can be doped by TCNQ, which normally doesn't dope polythiophenes. GIWAXS diffraction shows that PProDOT-Hx2 readily undergoes doping-induced crystallization. We hypothesize that the induced crystallization energy helps drive doping reactions in PProDOT-Hx2, making it effectively hundreds of mV easier to dope.

Presenters

  • Kara Lo

    University of California, Los Angeles

Authors

  • Kara Lo

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Charlene Salamat

    University of California Los Angeles, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Eric Wu

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Nesibe Akmanşen-Kalayci

    University of California Los Angeles, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Pratyusha Das

    University of Southern California

  • Barry Thompson

    University of Southern California, Univerisity of Southern California

  • Evan Doud

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Alexander Spokoyny

    University of California, Los Angeles

  • Sarah Tolbert

    University of California Los Angeles, University of California, Los Angeles

  • Benjamin J Schwartz

    University of California, Los Angeles