posted on 2020-11-17, 18:35authored byYazhou Wang, Yaping Yu, Hailiang Liao, Yecheng Zhou, Iain McCulloch, Wan Yue
ConspectusBecause
of their low-temperature processing properties and inherent
mechanical flexibility, semiconducting materials are promising candidates
for enabling flexible displays, renewable energy, biological sensors,
and healthcare. Progress has been made in materials performance by
developing judicious materials design strategies. For example, improvements
in electron transport have required new electron-deficient aromatics.
Among them, isoindigo (IID) is an important functional group utilized
in conjugated aromatics, where the structure combines two sets of
five-membered electron-withdrawing lactam rings, exhibiting enhanced
solubility, excellent chemical and thermal stabilities, broad absorption,
and intriguing electron affinity.In the past decade, researchers
have mainly focused on IID-based
materials. However, the effect of heteroatom modification of the IID
core has rarely been systemically investigated. In conventional conjugated
polymers, single bonds connect the monomers, leading to energetic
disorder and torsion defects, while ladder-type polymers are often
intractable because of their fused nature. In this regard, the molecular
design of new π scaffolds based on IID is central to the development
of high-performance semiconductor polymers. Especially, a complete
refresh of molecular design strategies and novel conjugated polymers
with unique structures are needed to circumvent the disadvantages
of the conventional ladder-type polymers.In this Account, we
systematically summarize our recent progress
in the design, synthesis, and structure–property relationships
of IID- and particularly hetero-IID-based functional materials. More
specifically, starting with molecular engineering of hetero-IIDs with
variable electronic effects, conjugation lengths, and numbers of heterorings,
we discuss the effect of the heteroring on the absorption spectra
and energy levels. Additionally, we investigate a series of electron-withdrawing
substitution of IIDs and hetero-IIDs and their molecular self-assembly
behavior and the device performance. Furthermore, we discuss a series
of IID–bis(EDOT) copolymers with hydrophilic ethylene glycol
side chains for accumulation-mode organic thin-film electrochemical
transistors, in which the relationships among the molecular structure,
operational stability, film morphology, and device performance were
revealed. Compared with IID polymers, the HOMO levels and optical
band gaps of the thiophene and thienothiophene IID copolymers markedly
decrease, and these polymers exhibit ambipolar charge transport. When
we further expanded the IID core to a thieno[3,2-b][1]benzothiophene isoindigo (TBTI) core, such as in TBTIT, bulk-heterojunction
solar cells employing this polymer class as the electron donor achieved
good efficiency for additive- and annealing-free device conditions.
When we introduced electron-deficient pyridine on the IID core, both
the LUMO and HOMO energy levels of the copolymers markedly decreased,
which significantly improved the electron mobility. In addition, we
compare the correlation between the polymer structures of IID and
hetero-IID copolymers with thiophene and benzothiophene as comonomers
and their absorption spectra and energy levels. In particular, we
evaluate the planarity and the dihedral angle between the repeat units,
with systematic analysis by theoretical calculations to support our
design concepts. We discuss polymer designs arising from simple aldol
condensation, where the rigid backbone conformation has been locked
by the double bonds. Our polymers display broad absorption from the
visible to the NIR-II region, and more importantly, the high electron
affinities of these polymers provide a platform to realize ambient-stable
electron transport in solution-processed organic thin-film transistors.
These exciting results are expected to open doors to new horizons
of semiconducting materials in terms of other charming applications
and the design and synthesis of superior materials.