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<scp>EDOT</scp>‐diketopyrrolopyrrole copolymers for high bulk hole mobility and near infrared absorption — C.J. Mueller (2015) | RDL Network
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<scp>EDOT</scp>‐diketopyrrolopyrrole copolymers for high bulk hole mobility and near infrared absorption
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Mukundan Mukundan Thelakkat
Universität Bayreuth
<scp>EDOT</scp>‐diketopyrrolopyrrole copolymers for high bulk hole mobility and near infrared absorption
Article
2015
en
Authors
CM
C.J. Mueller
CS
Chetan R. Singh
Mukundan Mukundan Thelakkat
Universität Bayreuth
Abstract
1 min read
ABSTRACT To obtain novel low‐bandgap materials with tailored hole‐transport properties and extended absorption, electron rich 3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene is introduced as a comonomer in diketopyrrolo[3,4‐ c ]pyrrole copolymers with different aryl flanking units. The polymers are characterized by absorption and photoluminescence spectroscopy, dynamic scanning calorimetry, cyclic voltammetry, and X‐ray diffraction. The charge transport properties of these new materials are studied carefully using an organic field effect transistor geometry where the charge carriers are transported over a narrow channel at the semiconductor/dielectric interface. These results are compared to bulk charge carrier mobilities using space‐charge limited current (SCLC) measurements, in which the charge carrier is transported through the complete film thickness of several hundred nanometers. Finally, charge carrier mobilities are correlated with the electronic structure of the compounds. We find that in particular the thiophene‐flanked copolymer PDPP[T] 2 ‐EDOT is a very promising candidate for organic photovoltaics, showing an absorption response in the near infrared region with an optical bandgap of 1.15 eV and a very high bulk hole mobility of 2.9 × 10 −4 cm 2 V −1 s −1 as measured by SCLC. This value is two orders of magnitudes higher than SCLC mobilities reported for other polydiketopyrrolopyrroles and is in the range of the well‐known hole transporting polymer poly(3‐hexylthiophene). © 2015 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J. Polym. Sci., Part B: Polym. Phys. 2016 , 54 , 639–648
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