posted on 2020-04-15, 20:17authored bySarbani Ghosh, Magnus Berggren, Igor Zozoulenko
A blend
made of p-type and n-type polymers can act as bipolar/ambipolar
material composites that transport both electrons and holes. Although
several experimental efforts are currently devoted to p-/n-type blends
of conducting polymers, theoretical studies of these systems are missing
to a large extent. In the current paper, using the density functional
theory (DFT) and the time-dependent DFT, we calculate electronic and
optical properties of a p-type/n-type polymeric blend, where we have
chosen the poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene)/benzimidazo-benzophenanthroline
ladder (PEDOT/BBL) as a model composite system. We demonstrate that
in the blend, PEDOT acts as an electron donor and BBL acts as an electron
acceptor under doped conditions. However, no charge transfer between
the chains takes place for an undoped composite system. Due to a significant
difference in the electron affinities and the ionization energies
of PEDOT and BBL, the electronic properties of a negatively (positively)
doped PEDOT/BBL blend are primarily governed by the chains where negative
(positive) charges are localized, i.e., the BBL chains (the PEDOT
chains). However, this is no longer valid for the optical absorption
where the electronic transition occurs between the two chains and,
therefore, the calculated UV–vis–near-infrared (NIR)
absorption spectra of the negatively (positively) doped PEDOT/BBL
blend are rather different compared to the corresponding spectra of
the single BBL chains (PEDOT chains). The electronic coupling between
the photoexcited state and the final charge-transfer state of the
blend was calculated to be ∼0.08 eV. The results presented
here are generic to a wide class of p-type/n-type combinations, which
was further confirmed by calculations performed on the polythiophene
(PT)/BBL blend.