TY - JOUR
T1 - Impact of Atomistic Substitution on Thin-Film Structure and Charge Transport in a Germanyl-ethynyl Functionalized Pentacene
AU - Sorli, Jeni C.
AU - Ai, Qianxiang
AU - Granger, Devin B.
AU - Gu, Kaichen
AU - Parkin, Sean
AU - Jarolimek, Karol
AU - Telesz, Nicholas
AU - Anthony, John E.
AU - Risko, Chad
AU - Loo, Yueh Lin
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2019 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2019/9/10
Y1 - 2019/9/10
N2 - Functionalization of organic semiconductors through the attachment of bulky side groups to the conjugated core has imparted solution processability to this class of otherwise insoluble materials. A consequence of this functionalization is that the bulky side groups impact the solid-state packing of these materials. To examine the importance of side-group electronic character on accessing the structural phase space of functionalized materials, germanium was substituted for silicon in triisopropylsilylethynylpentacene (TIPS-Pn) to produce triisopropylgermanylethynylpentacene (TIPGe-Pn), with the TIPGe side group comparable in size to TIPS, but higher in electron density. We find TIPGe-Pn single crystals exhibit slip-stack, herringbone, and brickwork packing motifs depending on growth conditions, a stark contrast to TIPS-Pn, which accesses only the brickwork packing motif in both single crystals and thin films. Polycrystalline thin films of TIPGe-Pn exhibit two new, unidentified polymorphs from spin-coating and postdeposition annealing. Our experiments suggest that access to the structural phase space is not guided solely by the size of the side group; the electronic character of the side group in functionalized compounds also plays a significant role. As such, simple atomistic substitutions can cause significant differences in the accessible solid structures.
AB - Functionalization of organic semiconductors through the attachment of bulky side groups to the conjugated core has imparted solution processability to this class of otherwise insoluble materials. A consequence of this functionalization is that the bulky side groups impact the solid-state packing of these materials. To examine the importance of side-group electronic character on accessing the structural phase space of functionalized materials, germanium was substituted for silicon in triisopropylsilylethynylpentacene (TIPS-Pn) to produce triisopropylgermanylethynylpentacene (TIPGe-Pn), with the TIPGe side group comparable in size to TIPS, but higher in electron density. We find TIPGe-Pn single crystals exhibit slip-stack, herringbone, and brickwork packing motifs depending on growth conditions, a stark contrast to TIPS-Pn, which accesses only the brickwork packing motif in both single crystals and thin films. Polycrystalline thin films of TIPGe-Pn exhibit two new, unidentified polymorphs from spin-coating and postdeposition annealing. Our experiments suggest that access to the structural phase space is not guided solely by the size of the side group; the electronic character of the side group in functionalized compounds also plays a significant role. As such, simple atomistic substitutions can cause significant differences in the accessible solid structures.
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U2 - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b00546
DO - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.9b00546
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85066136555
SN - 0897-4756
VL - 31
SP - 6615
EP - 6623
JO - Chemistry of Materials
JF - Chemistry of Materials
IS - 17
ER -