Abstract

Conjugation breakers (CBs) with different H-bonding chemistries and linker flexibilities are designed and incorporated into a diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP)-based conjugated polymer backbone. The effects of H-bonding interactions on polymer semiconductor morphology, mechanical properties, and electrical performance are systematically investigated. We observe that CBs with an H-bonding self-association constant >0.7 or a denser packing tendency are able to induce higher polymer chain aggregation and crystallinity in as-casted thin films, resulting in a higher modulus and crack on-set strain. Additionally, the rDoC (relative degree of crystallinity) of the stretched thin film with the highest crack on-set strain only suffers a small decrease, suggesting the main energy dissipation mechanism is the breakage of H-bonding interactions. By contrast, other less stretchable polymer films dissipate strain energy through the breakage of crystalline domains, indicated by a drastic decrease in rDoC. Furthermore, we evaluate their electrical performances under mechanical strain in fully stretchable field-effect transistors. The polymer with the highest crack on-set strain has the least degradation in mobility as a function of strain. Overall, these observations suggest that we can aptly tune the mechanical properties of a polymer semiconductor by modulating intermolecular interactions, such as H-bonding chemistry and linker flexibility. Such understanding provides molecular design guidelines for future stretchable semiconductors.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call