Resonant X-ray Diffraction Reveals the Location of Counterions in Doped Organic Mixed Ionic Conductors

  • Lucas Q. Flagg
  • , Jonathan W. Onorato
  • , Christine K. Luscombe
  • , Vinayak Bhat
  • , Chad Risko
  • , Ben Levy-Wendt
  • , Michael F. Toney
  • , Christopher R. McNeill
  • , Guillaume Freychet
  • , Mikhail Zhernenkov
  • , Ruipeng Li
  • , Lee J. Richter

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

12 Scopus citations

Abstract

Organic mixed ionic-electronic conductors (OMIECs) have the potential to enable diverse new technologies, ranging from novel in situ biosensors to flexible energy storage devices and neuromorphic computing platforms. However, their complex behavior in functional films involving electrolyte-induced swelling, ion ingress, and electrochemical doping inhibits rational material design. Of critical importance is an understanding of the specific location of the ions in the volumetrically doped material, yet this information is not readily available. In this report, we present the use of grazing-incidence resonant X-ray diffraction (RXRD, also known as anomalous diffraction) at S and Cl K-edges to determine the structure of a doped, prototypical, semicrystalline polymer OMIEC based on oligo(ethylene glycol) substitution of regioregular polythiophene. The RXRD measurement provides two key insights. Quantitative analysis of the RXRD allows the determination of the position of the ion relative to the polymer backbone in the crystalline regions. We find that the anion is relatively distant from the backbone, nearer to the lamella mid-plane naively in conflict with expected Coulombic attraction between the ion and the doped polymer polaron. Comparison of RXRD to Cl-fluorescence (total Cl-) allows determination of the relative order of doping between the crystalline and amorphous regions. We find preferential doping of the crystalline regions. Both insights, the preferential doping of crystals at low potential and the specific location of the counterion with respect to the polymer backbone, are critical to developing a microscopic understanding of transport in OMIECs.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3960-3967
Number of pages8
JournalChemistry of Materials
Volume35
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - May 23 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society. All rights reserved.

Funding

L.Q.F. acknowledges the support of a NIST-National Research Council fellowship. J.W.O. acknowledges the National Science Foundation (NSF) CBET-1922259 for support. This research used beamlines 12-ID (SMI) and 11-BM (CMS) of the National Synchrotron Light Source II, a US Department of Energy (DOE) Office of Science User Facility operated for the DOE Office of Science by Brookhaven National Laboratory under contract No. DE-SC0012704. The authors thank Sara Orski for size-exclusion chromatography studies of P3MEEMT and Subh Mukherjee and Peter Beaucage for preliminary RXRD measurements. V.B. and C.R. acknowledge the Office of Naval Research (ONR) N00014-18-1-2448 and the NSF DMR-1905734 in partial support of the work at the University of Kentucky, and the University of Kentucky Center for Computational Sciences and Information Technology Services Research Computing for their fantastic support and collaboration and use of the Lipscomb Compute Cluster and associated research computing resources. Aspects of the X-ray analysis (MFT) and DFT (CR) were supported by the Center for Soft PhotoElectroChemical Systems (SPECS), an Energy Frontier Research Center funded by the Office of Basic Energy Sciences, an office of science within the US Department of Energy (DE-SC0023411).

FundersFunder number
Center for Soft PhotoElectroChemical Systems
SPECS Surface Nano Analysis GmbH
Kentucky Transportation Center, University of Kentucky
National Science Foundation Arctic Social Science ProgramCBET-1922259
National Science Foundation Arctic Social Science Program
Office of Naval Research Naval AcademyN00014-18-1-2448, DMR-1905734
Office of Naval Research Naval Academy
U.S. Department of Energy EPSCoR
Office of Science Programs
DOE Basic Energy SciencesDE-SC0023411
DOE Basic Energy Sciences
Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)DE-SC0012704
Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL)
University of Kentucky
Department of Transport, UK Government
National Research Council

    ASJC Scopus subject areas

    • General Chemistry
    • General Chemical Engineering
    • Materials Chemistry

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