Abstract

Effective control of the molecular orientation and the degree of ordering in organic semiconductors is important to achieve high-performance organic electronics. Herein, we have successfully achieved highly oriented films in centimeter scale for a naphthalenedicarboximide-based semiconducting polymer (P(NDI2OD-T2)) by solvent vapor annealing (SVA) of precast films under a high magnetic field (HMF). As revealed by the microstructural studies, the SVA-HMF films exhibit a remarkably higher degree of chain alignment and high morphological uniformity compared to the HMF-guided drop-cast films. Based on the structural evolution of the films with the SVA time, a mechanism is proposed to elucidate the alignment process, which emphasizes that the chain aggregates re-formed in the swollen films trigger magnetic alignment and determine the film order. Compared with the unaligned films, field-effect transistors of the magnetic aligned P(NDI2OD-T2) films have exhibited a 19-fold enhancement of electron mobility and an extraordinarily large mobility anisotropy of 125. Furthermore, a significantly reduced energetic barrier for activated transport is observed on the aligned devices from temperature-variable measurements. The improved performance achieved by the HMF-SVA process has indicated its potential for high-performance organic electronic applications.

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