TY - JOUR
T1 - n-Type organic semiconducting polymers: stability limitations, design considerations and applications
AU - Griggs, Sophie
AU - Marks, Adam
AU - Bristow, Helen
AU - McCulloch, Iain
N1 - KAUST Repository Item: Exported on 2021-06-17
Acknowledged KAUST grant number(s): OSR-2018-CRG/CCF-3079, OSR-2019-CRG8-4086, OSR2018-CRG7-3749
Acknowledgements: The authors would like to acknowledge financial support from KAUST, including Office of Sponsored Research (OSR) awards no. OSR-2018-CRG/CCF-3079, OSR-2019-CRG8-4086 and OSR2018-CRG7-3749. We acknowledge funding from ERC Synergy
Grant SC2 (610115), the European Union’s Horizon 2020 Research and Innovation Programme under grant agreement no. 952911, project BOOSTER and grant agreement no. 862474, project RoLA-FLEX, as well as EPSRC Project EP/T026219/1.
PY - 2021/6/15
Y1 - 2021/6/15
N2 - This review outlines the design strategies which aim to develop high performing n-type materials in the fields of organic thin film transistors (OTFT), organic electrochemical transistors (OECT) and organic thermoelectrics (OTE). Figures of merit for each application and the limitations in obtaining these are set out, and the challenges with achieving consistent and comparable measurements are addressed. We present a thorough discussion of the limitations of n-type materials, particularly their ambient operational instability, and suggest synthetic methods to overcome these. This instability originates from the oxidation of the negative polaron of the organic semiconductor (OSC) by water and oxygen, the potentials of which commonly fall within the electrochemical window of n-type OSCs, and consequently require a LUMO level deeper than ∼−4 eV for a material with ambient stability. Recent high performing n-type materials are detailed for each application and their design principles are discussed to explain how synthetic modifications can enhance performance. This can be achieved through a number of strategies, including utilising an electron deficient acceptor–acceptor backbone repeat unit motif, introducing electron-withdrawing groups or heteroatoms, rigidification and planarisation of the polymer backbone and through increasing the conjugation length. By studying the fundamental synthetic design principles which have been employed to date, this review highlights a path to the development of promising polymers for n-type OSC applications in the future.
AB - This review outlines the design strategies which aim to develop high performing n-type materials in the fields of organic thin film transistors (OTFT), organic electrochemical transistors (OECT) and organic thermoelectrics (OTE). Figures of merit for each application and the limitations in obtaining these are set out, and the challenges with achieving consistent and comparable measurements are addressed. We present a thorough discussion of the limitations of n-type materials, particularly their ambient operational instability, and suggest synthetic methods to overcome these. This instability originates from the oxidation of the negative polaron of the organic semiconductor (OSC) by water and oxygen, the potentials of which commonly fall within the electrochemical window of n-type OSCs, and consequently require a LUMO level deeper than ∼−4 eV for a material with ambient stability. Recent high performing n-type materials are detailed for each application and their design principles are discussed to explain how synthetic modifications can enhance performance. This can be achieved through a number of strategies, including utilising an electron deficient acceptor–acceptor backbone repeat unit motif, introducing electron-withdrawing groups or heteroatoms, rigidification and planarisation of the polymer backbone and through increasing the conjugation length. By studying the fundamental synthetic design principles which have been employed to date, this review highlights a path to the development of promising polymers for n-type OSC applications in the future.
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10754/669610
UR - http://xlink.rsc.org/?DOI=D1TC02048J
U2 - 10.1039/d1tc02048j
DO - 10.1039/d1tc02048j
M3 - Article
C2 - 34277009
SN - 2050-7526
JO - Journal of Materials Chemistry C
JF - Journal of Materials Chemistry C
ER -