Abstract

The magnetic alignment of molecules, which exploits the anisotropy of diamagnetic susceptibility, provides a clean and versatile approach to the structural manipulation of semiconducting polymers. Here, the magnetic-alignment dynamics of two molecular-weight (MW) batches of a diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP)-based copolymer (PDVT-8) were investigated. Microstructural characterizations revealed that the magnetically aligned, high-MW (Mn = 53.7 kDa) PDVT-8 film exhibited a higher degree of backbone chain alignment and film crystallinity compared with the low-MW (Mn = 17.6 kDa) PDVT-8 film grown via the same magnetic alignment method. We found that as the MW increases, the degree of preaggregation of the polymer molecules in solution significantly increases and the aggregation mode changes from H-aggregation to J-aggregation through a cooperative assembly mechanism. These events improved the responsiveness of high-MW polymer molecules to magnetic fields. Field-effect transistors based on the magnetic aligned high-MW PDVT-8 films exhibited a 6.8-fold increase in hole mobility compared to the spin-coated films, along with a mobility anisotropy ratio of 12.6. This work establishes a significant correlation among chain aggregation behavior in solution, polymer film microstructures, magnetic responsiveness, and carrier transport performance in donor-acceptor polymer systems.

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