Packing Principles for Donor–Acceptor Oligomers from Analysis of

Jul 8, 2016 - Biography. Chi-Feng Huang received his B.S. degree in Chemical Engineering from National Taiwan University and his M.S. degree in Applie...
0 downloads 9 Views 2MB Size
Subscriber access provided by United Arab Emirates University | Libraries Deanship

Perspective

Packing Principles for Donor-Acceptor Oligomers from Analysis of Single Crystals Chi-Feng Huang, San-Lien Wu, Yi-Fan Huang, Ying-Cheng Chen, Shu-Ting Chang, Tzu-Yi Wu, Kuan-Yi Wu, Wei-Tsung Chuang, and Chien-Lung Wang Chem. Mater., Just Accepted Manuscript • DOI: 10.1021/acs.chemmater.6b00671 • Publication Date (Web): 08 Jul 2016 Downloaded from http://pubs.acs.org on July 16, 2016

Just Accepted “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been peer-reviewed and accepted for publication. They are posted online prior to technical editing, formatting for publication and author proofing. The American Chemical Society provides “Just Accepted” as a free service to the research community to expedite the dissemination of scientific material as soon as possible after acceptance. “Just Accepted” manuscripts appear in full in PDF format accompanied by an HTML abstract. “Just Accepted” manuscripts have been fully peer reviewed, but should not be considered the official version of record. They are accessible to all readers and citable by the Digital Object Identifier (DOI®). “Just Accepted” is an optional service offered to authors. Therefore, the “Just Accepted” Web site may not include all articles that will be published in the journal. After a manuscript is technically edited and formatted, it will be removed from the “Just Accepted” Web site and published as an ASAP article. Note that technical editing may introduce minor changes to the manuscript text and/or graphics which could affect content, and all legal disclaimers and ethical guidelines that apply to the journal pertain. ACS cannot be held responsible for errors or consequences arising from the use of information contained in these “Just Accepted” manuscripts.

Chemistry of Materials is published by the American Chemical Society. 1155 Sixteenth Street N.W., Washington, DC 20036 Published by American Chemical Society. Copyright © American Chemical Society. However, no copyright claim is made to original U.S. Government works, or works produced by employees of any Commonwealth realm Crown government in the course of their duties.

Page 1 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

Packing Principles for Donor-Acceptor Oligomers from Analysis of Single Crystals Chi-Feng Huang,a San-Lien Wu,a Yi-Fan Huang,a Ying-Cheng Chen,a Shu-Ting Chang,a Tzu-Yi Wu,a Kuan-Yi Wu,a Wei-Tsung Chuangb and Chien-Lung Wang*a a b

Department of Applied Chemistry, National Chiao Tung University, 1001 Ta Hsueh Road Hsinchu, 30010, Taiwan National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center, 101 Hsin-Ann Road, Hsinchu Science Park, Hsinchu, 300, Taiwan

ABSTRACT: D-A conjugated molecules are complicated in both their molecular and packing structures. In this perspective, we summarize more than 40 crystal lattices of conjugated oligomers to identify the morphological influence of each building block on the D-A molecules. These lattice structures reveal not only the packing preferences of the conjugated oligomers but also the conformational disorder in the lattices. The presence of this disorder in slowly grown crystals implies that attaining total long-range conformational order is challenging for D-A oligomers, which are structurally complicated and readily distorted, and which have building blocks of incommensurate packing dimensions. In opto-electronic applications, a decreased duration of processing can prevent ordering and trap the thin films of D-A oligomers from becoming crystalline phases. Although D-A oligomers conform to packing principles in the formation of a single crystal, their phase behaviors in the formation of active thin films are much more difficult to comprehend. Continuous advances in methods of characterization are still strongly required for the steps of attaining a true structure-property relation of DA oligomers in active films for opto-electronic applications.

1. Introduction The developments of conjugated molecules and of their applications in organic opto-electronics have been remarkable. Classified as third-generation semiconducting polymers,1 donor-acceptor (D-A) conjugated polymers play a particularly important role in progress toward an increased power conversion efficiency (PCE) of organic photovoltaics (OPV), and charge mobility (μ) of organic field-effect transistors (OFET). As illustrated in Figure 1a, D-A conjugated polymers are generally constructed with polymer backbones that have alternating D and A aromatic units, with lateral solubilizing side chains (R1 and R2). This anisotropic structure allows researchers to modulate the opto-electronic properties and the processing of the conjugated polymers separately.2-15 In seeking the best backbone D-A combinations,2, 16-21 the energy levels of the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) and the band gap (Eg) of D-A polymers were fine-tuned to offer ambient stability,22 and to approach the theoretical limits of the device performance.23-25 Side-chain engineering was applied to adjust the processing, self-organization behaviour26-28 and solid-state morphology of D-A polymers.11, 12, 29-31

Figure 1. Schematic illustrations of (a) a repeat unit of D-A conjugated polymers, and (b) D-A conjugated oligomers; R: terminal alkyl chains, R1, R2: lateral alkyl chains

The molecular design of conjugated polymers as 'quasi-one-dimensional (quasi-1D)' materials can provide excellent anisotropic optical and electronic properties1 because charges can be transported through both the intrachain delocalization and the inter-chain hopping in their condensed phases. When the inter-chain phase coherence is disturbed, the dimension of the charge transport becomes decreased from quasi-1D to 1D. The conformational disorder can hence disrupt the periodic arrangements of the conjugated polymers, and localize the charges onto

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

individual chains, which increases the activation energy or the trap breadth for charge transport.32 Phase morphology, which includes the lattice structure, domain size, crystallinity, molecular orientation etc., is consequently proved to be critical for the material performance in the OPV and OFET.33-39 PCE greater than 10 % and hole and electron mobilities (μh and μe) greater than 10 cm2 V-1 s-1 have been attained in OPV and OFET devices.11, 12, 40-49 However, to articulate the relation between the molecular structure and the phase morphology of D-A polymers remains challenging. The main reasons are that the polydispersity and the longchain structure of D-A polymers obscure the morphological influences of their building blocks. As the activation energies for the inter-aryl bond rotation are small,50, 51 the many rotatable single bonds on the backbone also result in a complicated conformational isomerism of the polymers.52-55 Thus, the periodic lamellar packing and πstacking, as indicated by the (h00) and the board (0k0) diffractions, are generally obtained from X-ray diffraction (XRD),9,48,56-58 but the periodic packing along the mainchain axis are seldom reported. So far, only few conjugated polymers have had their lattice structures solved;59-70 the phase-separation morphologies of few representative polymer/fullerene bulk heterojunction layers have been investigated in detail.71-74 Because the phase formation of the conjugated molecules is driven by weak physical interactions, polymorphism75,76 and diverse packing disorders77 can also be introduced into bulk and thin-film samples of the conjugated polymers. X-ray crystallography provides important information about the phase morphology, including the threedimensional atomic arrangement of molecules, the retrieved molecular shapes, and intermolecular packingschemes.78-80 In this respect, the recently developed D-A conjugated oligomers provide an improved platform to investigate the morphological influences of the D and A building blocks.81-88 Compared with the D-A polymers, although the truncated conjugated backbone breaks the intra-chain charge delocalization, the well defined chemical structures of the D-A oligomers facilitate the formation of an ordered phase, and the single-crystal structures of the D-A oligomers are particularly informative about the packing schemes and the packing disorders of the D-A molecules. Molecules that have physico-chemical properties sensitive to structure perform properly only when their molecular and solid-state structures are carefully engineered. Drug molecules likely represent the best example. The great molecular flexibility (5.6 rotatable bonds per molecule on average) causes conformational polymorphism,75 making the control of the solid-state structure essential for a pharmaceutical application. Similarly, the performance of D-A molecules is also highly sensitive to structure; they have even more numerous rotatable bonds on their backbones and on the alkyl substituents, but the morphological influences of the building blocks of D-A molecules have not been systematically summarized. Aiming to clarify the morphological influences of these

Page 2 of 19

building blocks, we organize this perspective in the following way. First, because the rotation of the inter-aryl and alkyl single bonds alters the molecular shape and brings conformational disorder to the phase structure, the definition of conformers and the classification of the condensed phases are introduced in section 2, so that subsequent discussion of the consequences of conformational isomerism can proceed. Next, we discuss the influences of the internal angles of aryl units (θAr in Figure 2) and the inter-aryl torsional angles (φAr-Ar in Figure 3) on the backbone geometry, and define the backbone curvature as θMol = (180o - bending angle of a molecule) as shown in Figure 4. With θMol, the unsubstituted conjugated backbones are separable into linear and curved ones; their packing preferences are discussed in section 3. As the terminal and lateral alkyl chains are also key components of conjugated molecules (Figure 1b), their influences on the packing schemes are discussed also in section 3, using the crystal structures of conjugated oligomers based on thienyl (-Th-) and phenyl(-Ph-). In section 4, the packing principles summarized from the Th/Ph oligomers are applied to discuss the packing schemes of D-A oligomers. As the length of the building block of an oligomer increases, conformational disorder starts to appear in the crystal lattice; the conformational disorder of the conjugated backbone and in the alkyl-chain domain are discussed in section 5. 2. Conformers and condensed phases IUPAC defines a conformer as “one of a set of stereoisomers, each of which is characterized by a conformation corresponding to a distinct potential-energy minimum”. 89 In the dilute phases (the gaseous or solution phase), a molecule with rotatable bonds can undergo conformational isomerization and be partitioned into the potentialenergy wells of separate conformers.75 In a condensed phase, molecules must balance the intra- and intermolecular energy; solidification, such as deposition, crystallization and vitrification, hence results in solid phases with either a unified conformation or conformational disorder. Wunderlich classified condensed phases into three classical phases -- melt, crystal, glass -- and six mesophases -- liquid crystal (LC), plastic crystal (PC), conformationally disordered crystal (CC), LC glass, PC glass and CC glass.77, 90 The crystalline phase is defined as a phase with long-range positional, molecular orientational and bond orientational orders. The positional order describes the periodic arrangement of the centres of masses of molecules; the molecular orientational order describes the alignment of the molecules, and the bond orientational order describes the alignment of bond vectors with respect to a lattice axis. The complete loss of order of the three types produces an amorphous melt or a glassy phase. These two amorphous phases are differentiated by the presence or absence of the cooperative molecular motions of large amplitude. According to this concept, mesophases involve a loss of only one or two partic-

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 3 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

ular long-range orders. LC, PC and CC phases are thus mesophases without long-range positional order, molecular orientational order and bond-orientational order, respectively. Cooling these mesophases to a temperature below their glass-transition temperatures (Tg) vitrifies the disordered domains, and results in the remaining three glassy mesophases- i.e. LC glass, PC glass and CC glass. Beyond the six main mesophases classified by Wunderlich, calamitic LC have many subphases. Details of the subphases of calamitic LC were provided by Persan.91 However, the packing schemes summarized in this work were replotted from the single-crystal structures of conjugated molecules. The molecules thus possess long-range positional order in the lattice, and cannot be classified as LC phases. In the following sections, via a systematic showing of the packing schemes of conjugated oligomers, it becomes clear that, as the backbone curvature, alkyl substituents and electron-withdrawing groups gradually increase the structural complication of conjugated molecules, it becomes increasingly difficult for conjugated molecules to attain long-range conformational and positional orders in the solid phases. Although some conjugated oligomers have solved single-crystal structures, the solid phases of these oligomers should be considered as the CC phase, because conformational disorder is found in the alkyl domains or along the backbones. In thin films of D-A oligomers, the cumulative (paracrystalline) disorder causes a broadening or a lack of high-order diffractions in their grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GI XRD) patterns. The long-range positional order is lost because of the cumulative disorder. With only their molecular orientational order, the thin films of the D-A oligomers are thus in the LC phases. 3.1 Geometries of conjugated backbones Molecular shape is explicitly described with bond lengths, angles between bonds, and inter-aryl torsional angles of a molecule. The single-crystal structures of linear oligothiophenes92-96 and linear p-oligophenyls97-103 show that the molecular angles have significant influences on the molecular geometry of a conjugated molecule. θAr, defined in Figure 2 affects the backbone curvature; φAr-Ar, illustrated in Figure 3, determines the coplanarity of a conjugated molecule. The conformational isomerization can alter the molecular shape via altering φAr-Ar.

Figure 2. Schematic diagram of θAr of (a) p-phenylene (-pPh), (b) thiophene-2,5-diyl (-Th-), (c) m-phenylene (-mPh-) and (d) dithieno(3,2-b;2’,3’-d)silole (-DTS-).

Figure 3. Schematic diagram of φAr-Ar, (a) φTh-Th for a bithiophene, (b) φPh-Ph for p-biphenyls, and (c) φPh-Ph for mterphenyls.

Figure 4. Schematic diagram of backbone curvatures (θMol) of (a) p-oligophenyls, (b) oligothiophene, (c) U-shaped moligophenyls, and (d) helical m-oligophenyls.

In Figure 2, θAr of p-phenylene (-pPh-), thiophene-2,5diyl (-Th-), m-phenylene (-mPh-), and dithieno(3,2-b;2’,3’d)silole (-DTS-) are 180o, 152o, 120o and 116 o, respectively. In the crystalline phases, φTh-Th of oligo(thiophene) and φPh-Ph of p-oligophenyls are ~ 0o,100 whereas φPh-Ph of moligophenyls are between 30o and 55o,103 as illustrated in Figure 3. As the large φPh-Ph of m-oligophenyls breaks backbone conjugation, m-oligophenyls are not considered to be conjugated molecules.104 Both oligophenyls 103, 105 and oligo(thiophene)s106-108 have nonplanar structures (φAr-Ar> 0o) in dilute phases. The oligomers have smaller φAr-Ar in a crystalline phase, because in the crystalline environment, distorting oligomers from a coplanar geometry imposes a large energetic penalty.107 Whereas θAr is for an aryl unit and φAr-Ar is for an Ar-Ar pair, the backbone curvature (θMol) is an angle resulting from the overall contribution from all θAr and φAr-Ar of a conjugated molecule. As shown in Figures 4a and 4b, although θAr of -pPh- and -Th- differ, p-oligophenyls and oligo(thiophene-2,5-diyl)s both have linear backbones (θMol = 0o), because θTh not equal to 180o can be compen-

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

sated on adjusting the -Th- units of the oligo(thiophene2,5-diyl)s into the transoid conformation. To describe the θMol of m-oligophenyls is difficult, because m-oligophenyls are not planar and can form several conformers. For example, the alternating signs of φPh-Ph (36o, 31o, -32o and 36o) result into the U-shaped conformer (Figure 4c), whereas all positive φPh-Ph in a sequence (53o, 34o, 44o, 44o, 34o ...) produce a helical conformer (Figure 4d).101 To facilitate a more straightforward discussion about the relation between the backbone curvature and the packing scheme, we consider θMol= 180o for the U-shaped conformer, and θMol= 120o for the helical conformer of m-oligophenyls. Their packing schemes are shown in section 3.2 These molecular angles not only alter the backbone shapes of conjugated oligomers, either linear or curved, but also determine their packing approach. The packing schemes of crystal phases in conjugated oligomers are illustrated in Figure 5. The linear backbone of conjugated oligomers typically adopts a perpendicular or tilted arrangement within a layer structure with respect to the layer planes. In the tilted case, there are two possible correlations between adjacent layers; one is a uniformly tilted direction for synclinic (Figure 5b) and another is anticlinic (Figure 5c). The layer structures in a herringbone arrangement are due to attractive interactions for neighboring molecules and minimization of the excluded volume to decrease the Gibbs energy of crystals. The curved directions of the oligomers in adjacent layers can form parallel or antiparallel packing, as shown in Figures 5d and 5e, whereas an intercalated packing (Figure 5f) can also be stabilized with a favorable dipolar pair interaction and packing efficiency

Page 4 of 19

3.2 Packing schemes of unsubstituted backbones Figure 6 shows two lattice projections of rod-like conjugated oligomers. Along the long-axis projection, both poligophenyls98,100 and oligo(thiophene-2,5-diyl)s93 pack into 2D layers with a herringbone arrangement. The lateral projections show that the number of repeat units, although altering the molecular length and affecting the tilt angle of the molecule with respect to the normal of the 2D layer, does not alter the 2D herringbone arrangement. p-terphenyl (p-Ph3) exhibits a packing different from the other three oligomers in Figure 6; it has a larger torsional angle with a synclinic arrangement. Oligothiophenes have smaller potential barriers for planarity (~ 0.4 kJ mol−1)106,108 than p-oligophenyls. Terthiophene is hence completely planar, but p-Ph3 has φPh-Ph = 15o in a crystalline environment. Comparing the crystal structures of pPh3 and p-quinquephenyl (p-Ph5), we find that an increased length of conjugation improved the planarity of p-oligophenyls in the crystalline environment. The linear shapes of backbones (θMol = 0o) favour a 2D herringbone packing, whereas the packing complication increases when θMol and φAr-Ar deviate from 0o. For example, the U-shaped conformers of m-quinquephenyl stack anti-parallel to form 2D sheets, as shown in Figure 7a,103 whereas the five-fold symmetric helical conformers of mdeciphenyl (Figure 7b) align their long axes along the crystallographic c-axis, and pack into a tetragonal lattice.109 These results thus provide a first glimpse into how θMol affects the packing preferences of conjugated backbones. In addition to the packing preference, moligophenyls formed only tiny crystals during slow crystallization, because of its distorted backbone geometry.109

Figure 6. Long-axis projection (up) and lateral projection (down) of crystal lattices of (a) p-terphenyl (p-Ph3), (b) pquinquephenyl (p-Ph5), (c) terthiophene (Th3) and (d) sexithiophene (Th6). Figure. 5 Linear backbone of conjugated oligomers in (a) perpendicular arrangement, and tilted arrangement within (b) tilted direction for synclinic and (c) anticlinic; curved backbone in (d) antiparallel scaly packing, (e) parallel scaly packing, and (f) intercalated packing.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 5 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

Figure 8. Backbone geometries and conformations of Th/Ph co-oligomers.

Figure 7. Packing schemes of U-shaped conformer 105 and helical conformer (b) of m-oligophenyls.

103

of (a),

3.3 Packing schemes of thiophene/phenylene cooligomers Conjugated oligomers constructed with both -Th- and -Ph- units have non-linear backbones. Figure 8 shows the chemical structures of three Th/Ph co-oligomers. As the Th- unit acts as the bending point, the oligomers have curved or S-shaped backbones. Furthermore, a backbone can switch between the two geometries through a conformational isomerization. Although these co-oligomers have non-linear backbones, when crystallizing, they adjust their conformations to minimize θMol. For cooligomers comprising -Th- units of even number, θMol can decrease to nearly 0o on arranging the -Th- units antiparallel. These co-oligomers forming 2D herringbone layers (Figure 9) are thus similar to those of the -Ph- and Th- oligomers (Figure 6),110 111 but, for those co-oligomers contain -Th- units of odd number, conformational isomerization cannot decrease θMol to ~ 0o. In this case, the parallel or antiparallel scaly packing of the curved backbones is discernible in the lateral views of Figures 10a and 10b.112 When two cyano substituents (-CN) are placed onto the α,ω-positions of curved 2,5-di(biphenyl-4yl)thiophene, an intercalated packing was formed because of a favorable interaction between the central -Th- and the terminal -CN units (Figure 10c).113

Figure 9. Long-axis (up) and lateral projections (down) of crystal lattices of Th/Ph co-oligomers, which have -Th- units 110 of even number; (a) 5,5'-bis(4-biphenyl)-2,2'-bithiophene 110 (b) 5,5'''-bis(4-biphenyl)-quaterthiophene and (c) 1,4-bis(5114 phenylthiophen-2-yl)benzene.

Figure 10. Long-axis (up) and lateral projections (down) of the crystal lattices of Th/Ph co-oligomers, which have -Thunits of odd number. (a) 2,5-bis(4'-methoxybiphenyl-4112 115 yl)thiophene, (b) 5,5''-di(biphenyl-4-yl)-terthiophene and (c) 4',4'''-(thiophene-2,5-diyl)bis([1,1'-biphenyl]-4113 carbonitrile).

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Based on the packing schemes of the -Ph- oligomers, the -Th- oligomers and the Th/Ph co-oligomers, a rule of thumb for the packing of conjugated backbones is perceptible. First, a herringbone packing is favorable for the close packing of the unsubstituted conjugated backbones. Second, for close packing of the curved ones, within the 2D herringbone layer, the molecules adopt a parallel or antiparallel scaly packing shown in Figure 10a, b respectively. A favorable interaction between central and end functional groups can induce intercalated packing (Figure 10c) of curved conjugated backbones. Some fused aromatic units such as thienothiophene (TT-) (Figure 11) have θAr = 180o; these units do not bend the backbone. Examples such as the -TT- oligomers and the TT/Ph co-oligomers thus also have θMol = 0o and pack into a 2D herringbone layer with a tilted arrangement as expected.116,117 Because of a lack of rotatable inter-aryl bonds, the packing schemes of polycyclic arenes and heteroarenes are not summarized in this contribution, 118--128 but, as long as chemical fusion of the neighboring aryl units does not significantly alter θMol, most nearly linear polycyclic arenes and heteroarenes form 2D herringbone layers.

Figure 11. Long-axis (up) and lateral projections (down) of crystal lattices of TT oligomers; (a) 2,2'-bi(thieno[3,2(b) 2,5-bis(4-Biphenylyl)thieno(3,2b]thiophenyl)116 b)thiophene117 and (c) 2,5-bis(9H-Fluoren-2-yl)thieno(3,2b)thiophene.117 The conformational disorder along the backbone is emphasized with a red circle. 3.4 Solubilizing side chains and packing schemes The flexible terminal and lateral substituents show distinct influences on the packing schemes of conjugated molecules. The terminal groups, such as aliphatic chains or silane groups, affect the in-plane tilt angles of the conjugated backbones featuring anticlinic (Figure 12a and 12d) and synclinic (Figures 12b and 12c) forms, but have little influence on the 2D herringbone packing.111, 129-133 The electron-withdrawing trifluoromethyl group and the electron-donating methoxyl group on two Th/Ph cooligomers -- 5,5’-bis[4-(trifluoromethyl)phenyl-1-yl]-2,2’bithiophene133 and 5,5'-bis(4'-methoxybiphenyl-4-yl)-2,2'bithiophene -- also do not alter the 2D herringbone packing (Figure 12d).111 The segregation of these terminal

Page 6 of 19

groups form 2D aliphatic layers between 2D herringbone layers of the backbones; an alternating aromatic and aliphatic lamellar structure along the long axis of the molecule is thus obtained. For the terminally alkylated polycyclic heteroarenes,135 similar effects on packing schemes were observed.

Figure 12. long-axis (up) and lateral projections (down) of crystal lattices of terminally substituted quaterthiophenes: 129 (a) 5,5'''-dimethyl-quaterthiophene, (b) 5,5'''-dibutyl130 (c) 5,5'''-di(trimethylsilane)quaterthiophene, 133 quaterthiophene and (d) 5,5'-bis(4'-methoxybiphenyl-4-yl)111 2,2'- bithiophene.

Lateral alkyl chains have more severe influences than terminal alkyl chains on the backbone shape and the packing scheme, because they impose intra- and intermolecular steric hindrance on neighboring aryl units. Barbarella et al. showed that the two central β-methyl substituents on 4,4’,3”,4’’’-tetramethyl-quaterthiophene not only induce large φTh-Th (> 40o) in solution,136, 137 but also distort the neighboring thiophene rings in the crystalline state.138 The steric effect of the lateral methyl substituents thus prevents the planarity of the conjugated backbone. In the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre (CCDC) database,139, only few lateral alkylated oligothiophenes, and no lateral alkylated p-oligophenyl, has resolved single crystal structure, indicating that lateral alkyl chains also hinder the crystallization of the conjugated oligomers. Regarding the packing schemes, because the lateral chains prevent edge-to-face packing of the backbones,140 the (brickwall or staircase) face-to-face π-stacking was found in crystals of the laterally alkylated oligothiophenes. For example, in the long-axis projections of Figure 13, the 4,4’,3”,4’’’-tetramethyl-quaterthiophenes adopt a brickwall packing with π-stacking distance dπ-π = 3.61 Å; the 3,3'''didodecyl and 3,3'''-hexyl quaterthiophenes.140 adopt a staircase packing with dπ-π = 3.41 Å and 3.62 Å, respectively. The length of the alkyl chain affects the lateral segregation between the conjugated backbones. As shown in the lateral projections of Figures 13b and 13c, the dodecyl chains create a lateral distance 2.0 nm; the hexyl chains have distance 1.5 nm for the intercalated arrangement. 3,3'''-dipropyl-quaterthiophenes do not form a paralleldisplaced π-π stacking, because the propyl chains are too short to provide sufficient physical interactions between

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 7 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

themselves. Azumi et al.141 reported the crystal structure of a lateral alkylated dodecithiophene (12T in Figure 14). The much elongated conjugated backbone does not alter the face-to-face π-stacking, but induces a superior alignment for the conjugated backbones in the lamellar structure, as shown in the lateral projection in Figure 14. 12T thus has a lattice structure that resembles the form II packing of poly(alkylthiophene)s.69

(Figure 15a) rather than the face-to-face arrangement in the aromatic domain. For comparison with face-to-face πstacking, the aromatic rings of conjugated backbones in edge-to-face stacking have larger φAr-Ar. In the more extreme cases, the lateral chains even intercalate into the stacking of the conjugated backbones, and completely degrade the close π-stacking of the backbones, as is visible in the crystal structures of 2,7-di(2-thienyl)-9,9dihexylfluorene (Figure 16a),144 3',3"",4,4""142 tetrabutylhexathiophene, (Figure 16b), and 2,6-di([2,2'bithiophen]-5-yl)-4,4-dihexyl-4H-silolo[3,2-b:4,5b']dithiophene (Th2-DTS-Th2).145

Figure 13. Long-axis (up) and lateral projections (down) of crystal lattices of the lateral alkylated quaterthiophenes: (a) 138 4,4',3'',4'''-tetramethyl-quaterthiophene, (b) 3,3'''-didodecyl140 140 quaterthiophene, and (c) 3,3'''-dihexyl-quaterthiophene.

Figure 15. Long-axis (up) and lateral projections (down) of 142 crystal lattices of (a) 3'',4''-dibutylpentathione and (b) 5,5''143 bis(9,9-dioctyl-9H-fluoren-2-yl)-terthiophene.

Figure.14 Packing scheme 141 dodecithiophene (12T)

of

hexakis

(dodecyl)-

3,4-dialkylthiophene and 9,9-dialkylfluorene are also lateral alkylated aryl units, but they differ from the transoid lateral alkylated oligothiopenes discussed above because their lateral alkyl chains are distributed on only one side of the aryl unit. In the crystal structures of 3",4"dibutylpentathiophene (Figure 15a)142 and 5,5”-Bis-(9,9dioctyl-9H-fluoren-2-yl)-2,2’;5’,2”-terthiophene (Figure 15b),143 the lamellar structure is still found, but the conjugated backbones adopt an edge-to-face arrangement

Figure 16. Packing schemes of (a) 2,7-bis(2-thienyl)-9,9144 dihexylfluorene (a) 2,7-bis(2-thienyl)-9,9-dihexylfluorene 142 and (b) 3',3'''',4',4''''-tetrabutylhexathione. The conformational disorder on the backbone is emphasized with a red circle. 4. Packing schemes of the D-A oligomers

2,1,3-benzothiadiazole (BT), 5,6-difluoro-4,7di(thiophen-2-yl)benzo-2,1,3-thiadiazole (FBT), naphtho[1,2-c:5,6-c’]bis[1,2,5]thiadiazole (NT), thieno[3,4c]pyrrole-4,6-dione (TPD), and 1,4-diketo-pyrolo[3,4c]pyrrole (DPP) in Figure 17 are widely used acceptors in D-A conjugated molecules. Because of additional elec-

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Page 8 of 19

tron-withdrawing groups, i.e. the pendant thiadiazole, fluorine, pyrrole-2,5-dione units and the main-chain 1,4diketo-pyrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole unit, the A units have more complicated chemical structures than the -Ph- and -Thunits. To understand the influences of these electronwithdrawing groups, we classified these acceptors based on their θAr and whether they have lateral side chains. θAr of BT, FBT, NT and DPP units are hence all 180o, but θAr of TPD is 163o. TPD and DPP differ from the other acceptors because of their lateral alkyl groups. The influences of these structural factors are discussed based on the single crystal structures of the reported D-A molecules.

N

S

N

N

F BT

S

N

S

N

N S NT

F

FBT

O

R N

S TPD

R N O

N

N

Figure 19. (a) 5,6-Difluoro-4,7-bis(4-hexyl-2-thienyl)-2,1,3147 benzothiadiazole and (4,7-bis(4-Hexyl-2-thienyl)-2,1,3147 benzothiadiazole; the conformational disorder on the backbone is emphasized with a red circle.

O

Ar

Ar O

N R

DPP

Figure 17. Representative acceptor units used in D-A conjugated molecules.

Figure 20. Long-axis (up) and lateral projections (down) of crystal lattices of (a) 5,10-bis(4-methyl-2thienyl)[1,2,5]thiadiazolo[3',4':5,6]naphtho[1,2148 c][1,2,5]thiadiazole and (b) 5,5'-dioctyl-4H,4'H-1,1'149 bithieno[3,4-c]pyrrole-4,4',6,6'(5H,5'H)-tetrone

146

Figure 18. (a) 4,7-di(thiophen-2-yl)benzo-2,1,3-thiadiazole (Th-BT-Th) and (b) 5,6-difluoro-4,7-di(thiophen-2-yl)benzo52 2,1,3-thiadiazole (Th-FBT-Th); the conformational disorder on the backbone is emphasized with a red circle.

As shown in Figure 18, 4,7-di(thiophen-2-yl)benzo2,1,3-thiadiazole (Th-BT-Th),146 and 5,6-difluoro-4,7di(thiophen-2-yl)benzo-2,1,3-thiadiazole (Th-FBT-Th)52 stack into a rooftop arrangement that differs from the herringbone arrangement of p-Ph3 and Th3 in Figure 6. In the herringbone packing, the edge of one oligomer interacts with the face of the other, whereas in the rooftop packing, the end of one oligomer points to the face of the terminal thienyl group of the other. In Figure 19, the terminal hexyl groups do not alter the rooftop packing of the Th-FBT-Th backbones, but they turn Th-BT-Th backbones from the rooftop packing into face-to-face πstacking.146 The single-crystal structure of 5,10di(thiophen-2-yl)naphtho[1,2-c:5,6-c']bis([1,2,5]thiadiazole) (Th-NT-Th) is not reported, but its alkylate analogue, 5,10-bis(4-methyl-2-thienyl)[1,2,5] thiadiazolo[3',4':5,6]naphtho[1,2-c][1,2,5]thiadiazole, adopts faceto-face π-stacking as shown in Figure 20a.148 The influ-

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 9 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

ences of the lateral side chains are found also in the crystal structures of 5,5'-dioctyl-4H,4'H-1,1'-bithieno[3,4c]pyrrole-4,4',6,6'(5H,5'H)-tetrone (TPD2),149 and the laterally alkylated DPP oligomer, 3,6-bis(4-(2,2'-Bithiophen-5yl)phenyl)-2,5-dihexyl-2,5-dihydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4dione) (C6PT2),150 as shown in Figures 20b and 21a. TPD2 has a packing scheme similar to that of 3,3'''-dialkylquaterthiophenes (Figures 13b, c), indicating that the πstacking is favoured by the laterally alkylated conjugated oligomers. In Figure 21a, C6PT2 also adopts face-to-face π-stacking, but in the π-stacks the neighboring molecules shift along their long-axis ~8 Å to avoid the steric hindrance among the lateral alkyl chains. Comparing the packing scheme of C6PT2 with those of C6PT2C6 (Figure 21b), C6PT1C6 (Figure 21c) and C6PT3C6 (Figure 21d), we found that adding the terminal alkyl chains improves the order of the herringbone packing, but varying the conjugation length does not significantly affect the herringbone packing of the DPP oligomers.150 The replacement of the linear lateral hexyl chains with branched ethylhexyl (-EH) chains (Figure 21e) pushes the neighboring DPP units away from each other. The distance centre to centre between neighbouring EHPT2C6 molecules increases to 5.7 Å; the face-to-face π-stacking is broken. Without the close π-stacking, the coplanarity of the EHPT2C6 backbone is degraded; larger φAr-Ar are observed. As a -Ph- unit generally causes larger φAr-Ar than a –Th- unit, wondering whether close π-stacking becomes restored on replacing the –Ph- units of EHPT2C6 with – Th- units, we synthesized 2,5-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-3,6-bis(5''hexyl-[2,2':5',2''-terthiophen]-5-yl)pyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole1,4(2H,5H)-dione (EHT3C6). The crystal structure in Figure 21f shows that EHT3C6 forms an ordered π-stack. Although both have branched -EH units, EHT3C6 can attain a coplanar molecular structure and ordered πstacking more readily than EHPT2C6, which contains the –Ph- units. The DTS centered D’-A-D-A-D’ oligomers developed by Bazan and co-workers are the best performing donor materials in OPV.81-85 To have sufficient solubility, these oligomers have curved backbones, lateral alkyl chains and, in several cases, also terminal alkyl chains. The backbones of the oligomers are curved because the center -DTS- unit has θAr = 68o, and also because the backbones are made with both -Th- and -Ph- units. In the single-crystal structures of the D-A-DTS-A-D oligomers,85, 151-153 the conjugated backbones have effective coplanarity, and adopt close face-to-face π-stacking with dπ-π between 3.4 and 3.8 Å, as shown in the long-axis projections of Figure 22. From the lateral projections of Figure 22, the anti-parallel scaly packing of the curved backbones is found. Although the D-A oligomers have more complicated chemical structures, if one considers the electron-withdrawing groups of the A units also as the lateral substituents, the packing principles summarized from the Th/Ph oligomers are still applicable to a certain extent.

5. Conformational disorder in lattices of D-A oligomers Inspecting the packing schemes from Figure 5 to Figure 22, one finds conformational disorder of the conjugated backbone in Figures 11, 16b, 18ab, 19a, 21a, 22a and 22d, and those of alkyl chains in Figure 21e, 22a-d. In the conjugated backbones, the conformational disorder is located at the –TT- (Figure 11) and –FBT- units (Figures 19a and 22d). At the ends of the backbones, conformational disorder is found at the unalkylated terminal –Thunit (Figures 16b, 18ab, 21a and 22a). Because –TT-, BT- and –FBT- units have θAr = 180o, flipping these units along the long axis of the conjugated molecules for 180o alters the orientation of the aromatic units, but does not affect θMol and the potential energy of the conjugated molecules.50, 51 Although θAr of a –Th- unit is not 180o, flipping the unalkylated –Th- unit at the ends of the backbone also has little influence on the backbone. These aromatic units were thus found to have two orientations in their crystal lattices. The conformational disorder in the alkyl-chain domain is perceptible on the lateral -EH groups of the DPP and DTS D-A oligomers. The conformational disorders in the crystal lattice of 7,7'-(4,4-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-4H-silolo[3,2b:4,5-b']dithiophene-2,6-diyl)bis(5-fluoro-4-(5'-hexyl[2,2'-bithiophen]-5-yl)benzo[c][1,2,5]thiadiazole) are illustrated in Figure 24. The formation of the conformational disorder in the alkyl chain domains can contribute to the fact that the lattice dimensions of the n-alkanes154 are incommensurate with the space created with a close stack of the conjugated backbones. The branched structure of the –EH unit makes long-range conformational order even more difficult to attain, and generally results in amorphous alkyl domains. In the case of the D-A-DTS-AD oligomers, the differences in the potential energy of the banana, twisted bithiophene, zigzag, and banana-withflipped-bithiophenes conformations are less than 4 kJ mol-1. 84,151,155 The thermal energy near 300 K is hence sufficient to distribute the molecules into the various conformations. If the crystallization cannot unify the conformations of the molecules before their molecular motions are restricted in the solid phases, the conformational disorders are trapped in the crystal lattices, resulting in the CC phase.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Page 10 of 19

Figure 21. Long-axis (up) and lateral projections (down) of crystal lattices of (a) 3,6-bis(4-(2,2'-bithiophen-5-yl)phenyl)-2,5150 dihexyl-2,5-dihydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4-dione(C6PT2), (b) 2,5-dihexyl-3,6-bis(4-(5'-hexyl-2,2'-bithiophen-5-yl)phenyl)150 2,5-dihydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4-dione (C6PT2C6). (c) 2,5-dihexyl-3,6-bis(4-(5-hexyl-2-thienyl)phenyl)-2,5150 dihydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4-dione (C6PT1C6), (d) 2,5-dihexyl-3,6-bis(4-(5''-hexyl-2,2':5',2''-terthiophen-5-yl)phenyl)-2,5150 dihydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4-dione (C6PT3C6), (e) 2,5-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-3,6-bis(4-(5'-hexyl-2,2'-bithiophen-5-yl)phenyl)150 2,5-dihydropyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4-dione (EHPT2C6) and (f) 2,5-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-3,6-bis(5''-hexyl-[2,2':5',2''-terthiophen]-5yl)pyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4(2H,5H)-dione (EHT3C6); the conformational disorder along the backbone (in the alkyl domain) is emphasized with a red circle.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 11 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

Figure 22. (a) 4'-(4,4-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-4H-silolo[3,2-b:4,5-b']dithiophene-2,6-diyl)bis(7-(thiophen-2-yl)-[1,2,5]thiadiazolo[3,4151 (b) 4,4'-(4,4-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-4H-silolo[3,2-b:4,5-b']dithiophene-2,6-diyl)bis(7-(benzofuran-2-yl)c]pyridine), 83 [1,2,5]thiadiazolo[3,4-c]pyridine), (c) 4,4'-(4,4-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-4H-silolo[3,2-b:4,5-b']dithiophene-2,6-diyl)bis(7-(5'-hexyl-[2,2'152 bithiophen]-5-yl)-[1,2,5]thiadiazolo[3,4-c]pyridine), (d) 7,7'-(4,4-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-4H-silolo[3,2-b:4,5-b']dithiophene-2,6153 diyl)bis(5-fluoro-4-(5'-hexyl-[2,2'-bithiophen]-5-yl)benzo[c][1,2,5]thiadiazole); the conformational disorder along the backbone (in the alkyl domain) is emphasized with a red circle.

6. Conclusions and outlook

Figure 23. Illustration of conformational disorder in the lattice of 7,7'-(4,4-bis(2-ethylhexyl)-4H-silolo[3,2-b:4,5b']dithiophene-2,6-diyl)bis(5-fluoro-4-(5'-hexyl-[2,2'bithiophen]-5-yl)benzo[c][1,2,5]thiadiazole).153

In this review, we summarize the morphological influences of the backbone geometries and the alkyl substituents of conjugated oligomers. The crystal lattices of the unsubstituted Th/Ph oligomers reveal the packing preferences of the conjugated backbones; the crystal lattices of the alkylated Th/Ph and D-A oligomers show how the alkyl substituents affect the packing of the conjugated molecules. In general, the unsubstituted conjugated backbones favour stacking into 2D herringbone layers; the backbone curvature, i.e. θMol, affects the lateral arrangements (parallel or scaly) of the backbones. The alkylated oligomers form lamellar structures with alternating 2D aliphatic or aromatic layers. For the terminal alkylated oligomers, the normal direction of the lamellar structure points along the long axis of the molecule, whereas, for the lateral alkylated oligomers, the lamellar normal is generally perpendicular to the long axis of the molecule. The lateral alkyl chains are more powerful to degrade the backbone coplanarity, altering the packing schemes (from herringbone to face-to-face π-stacking), and breaking the intimate π-stacking among the backbones. If we consider the electron-withdrawing groups of

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

the A units also as the lateral substituents, some packing preferences of D-A oligomers are similar to those of the Th/Ph oligomers. In addition to the packing principles, the summarized lattice structures reveal the conformational disorder in single crystals. On conjugated backbones, conformational disorder is found at the –TT-, -BT-, –FBT- or the unalkylated terminal –Th- unit; in the alkyl chain domain, the disorder is perceptible on the lateral -EH groups of -DPPand -DTS- conjugated oligomers. The small energy differences among the conformational isomers and the incommensurate packing dimensions of alkyl chains and DA backbones result in a lack of long-range conformational order in the crystal lattices. According to Wunderlich’s classification of condensed phases,77 these oligomers are thus in a CC phase rather than a crystalline phase. The observation of the packing disorder in these single crystals thus indicates that the increased number of building blocks and rotatable bonds in a D-A oligomer make it more difficult for the oligomers to unify their conformations during crystallization. Except the conjugated oligomers summarized here, many D-A oligomers, which have curved D-A backbones, lateral and terminal alkyl substituents, do not form single crystals of suitable size and quality,84,87,155-157 indicating that, besides the long-range conformational order, the positional and molecular orientational order are also challenging to build for many D-A oligomers. In particular, when D-A oligomers serve as active layers of OFET and OPV devices, in solution, they have only a limited period (few minutes, compared to few weeks for the growth of a single crystal) to adjust the conformations and intermolecular packing. In addition to conformational disorder, a positional disorder evident according to the absence or broadening of high-order diffraction signals in the GI XRD measurements56 was also commonly observed in active films of D-A oligomers.83,155,158,159 Without longrange conformational and positional order, many active films are in the LC phase with only molecular orientational order. Conformational disorder is known to affect the effective conjugation length, and, consequently, the optical and electronic properties of conjugated molecules. 160,161 Molecules in the meso- or amorphous phases also have electronic properties and phase stability different from those in the crystalline phases. Although the packing principles of D-A oligomers in the crystalline phase are summarized in this work, the packing structure and packing disorder in active films remain a complicated topic to investigate. Developments of methods of characterization to show the molecular packing and to quantify the degree of structural disorder in the active films will yield structure-property relations of D-A oligomers for opto-electronic applications, so that the exact bottlenecks of device performance might be better identified in the future.

Page 12 of 19

7. Experiments Materials and general characterizations. All chemicals (from Aldrich, Acros or TCI) were used as received unless specified in a synthetic scheme. 1H and 13C NMR spectra were recorded (Varian, 400 MHz) for samples in deuterium-substituted chloroform CDCl3 as reference with TMS (0.5 mass %) using spectrometers. Synthesis and characterization of 2,5-bis(2ethylhexyl)-3,6-bis(5''-hexyl-[2,2':5',2''-terthiophen]-5yl)pyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4(2H,5H)-dione (EHT3C6) To a stirred solution of 3,6-bis(5-bromothiophen-2-yl)2,5-bis(2-ethylhexyl)pyrrolo[3,4-c]pyrrole-1,4(2H,5H)dione (400 mg, 0.6 mmol), 2-(5'-hexyl-[2,2'-bithiophen]-5yl)-4,4,5,5-tetramethyl-1,3,2-dioxaborolane (428 mg, 1.5 mmol) and potassium carbonate (486 mg, 3.5 mmol) in degassed toluene/H2O (20/5 mL) containing Pd(PPh3)4 (68 mg, 0.06 mmol) was added a drop of Aliquat 336. The reaction mixture was stirred at 80 oC under a dinitrogen atmosphere for 16 h. After cooling to 295 K, a saturated aqueous NH4Cl solution was added. The reaction mixture was extracted with dichloromethane. The collected organic layer was dried over MgSO4, filtered and concentrated under diminished pressure. The residue was purified on a column chromatograph (SiO2, hexane/ethyl acetate = 30/1 (v/v)) and re-precipitated with methanol to give a navy blue solid EHT3C6 (110 mg, 20%). 1H NMR (400 MHz, CDCl3): δ/ppm 8.94 (d, J= 4.1 Hz, 2H), 7.29 (d, J= 4.2 Hz, 2H), 7.21 (d, J= 3.8 Hz, 2H), 7.04 (dd, J= 6.6, 3.7 Hz, 4H), 6.71 (d, J= 3.5 Hz, 2H), 4.05 (t, J= 6.9 Hz, 4H), 2.81 (t, J= 7.5 Hz, 4H), 1.94 (s, 2H), 1.83 –1.63 (m, 4H), 1.44 –1.22 (m, 30H), 0.96 –0.84 (m, 16H). 13C NMR (151 MHz, CDCl3): δ/ppm 161.46, 146.76, 139.42, 137.22, 134.13, 128.07, 125.10, 124.27, 124.20, 108.78,46.13, 39.43, 31.71, 30.53, 30.34, 29.84, 28.91, 28.73, 23.85, 23.29, 22.72, 14.25, 14.22, 10.74. EI-MS C58H72N2O2S689 calc. for [M]+: m/z = 1021.59, found [M]+: m/z = 1021.7 Single-crystal X-ray diffraction and analysis of the structure of EHT3C6: EHT3C6 (1 mg mL-1) was dissolved in a mixed solvent (dichloromethane and methanol, 2/1; v/v). A single crystal of DPP6T formed during slow evaporation of the mixed solvent near 295 K. The diffraction was measured (Oxford Gemini Duo system, single-crystal X-ray diffractometer equipped with Cryojet at 200 K). Parameters of the unit cell were determined on least-squares refinement of the three-dimensional centroids of several thousand reflections. The structure was solved by direct method (SHELXS-97) and refined using full-matrix least-squares on F2. Preparation of a lattice model. All CIF files of conjugated molecules were downloaded from the Cambridge Crystallographic Data Centre (CCDC).139 The files were processed (Cerius2, Accelrys) to generate the projections of the packing schemes of the molecules.

ASSOCIATED CONTENT

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 13 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

The crystallographic information files (CIF) of EHT3C6 can be found in Supporting Information. This material is available free of charge via the Internet at http://pubs.acs.org.

AUTHOR INFORMATION Corresponding Author a

Chien-Lung Wang. E-mail: [email protected]

Present Addresses a

Department of Applied Chemistry, National Chiao Tung University, 1001 Ta Hsueh Road Hsin-Chu, 30010 (Taiwan)

Dr. Chien-Lung Wang received his Ph. D. degree in Polymer Science at the University of Akron in 2011. His Ph. D. research focused on the supermolecular chemistry and optoelectronic properties of the C60−porphyrin derivatives. After spending six months as a postdoctoral assistant in Prof. Xiong Gong’s research group at the Department of Polymer Engineering, University of Akron, he joined the Department of Applied Chemistry, National Chiao Tung University, in 2011 as an assistant professor. In 2015, he was promoted to associate professor. His current research focuses on the structural characterizations, the structure-property relationship, and the crystal engineering of conjugated molecules and self-organized functional materials.

Funding Sources Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan (MOST 1032221-E-009-213-MY3, MOST 104-2628-E-009-007-MY3) supported this work. Biographies Chi-Feng Huang received his B. S. degree in Chemical Engineering from National Taiwan University and his M. S. degree in Applied Chemistry from National Chiao-Tung University (NCTU). He worked as a research assistant at National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center for diffraction imaging from 2010. He is currently pursuing a Ph. D. degree under the supervision of Prof. Chien-Lung Wang at Department of Applied Chemistry, NCTU, and Prof. KengSan Liang at Institute of Physics, Academia Sinica. His research is focused on the structural characterization of conjugated molecules by X-ray scattering and diffraction. San-Lien Wu received his B. S. degree from the Department of Chemistry, National Sun Yat-Sen University, Taiwan; in 2012 he joined the group of Prof. Chien-Lung Wang at Department of Applied Chemistry, National Chiao Tung University, Taiwan as a Ph. D. graduate student. His research topic is the synthesis of self-assembling functional materials. Kuan-Yi Wu is a Ph. D. candidate in the Department of Applied Chemistry of National Chiao Tung University (NCTU) in Taiwan. He obtained his B. S. degree in Applied Chemistry at NCTU in 2011. He is currently conducting research under the guidance of Dr. Chien-Lung Wang. His research interests focus on structural characterization by diffraction and crystal engineering of conjugated molecules for an organic fieldeffect transistor. Dr. Wei-Tsung Chuang, born in 1975, studied polymer science and completed a Ph. D. program, focusing on polymer crystallization, in Department of Polymer Engineering at National Taiwan University of Science and Technology (Taiwan). He subsequently worked as beamline manager of the X-ray diffraction end station at National Synchrotron Radiation Research Center (NSRRC), Taiwan. In 2010, he was appointed Assistant Research Scientist of the Material Science Group at NSRRC, followed recently by promotion to Associate Research Scientist at the same organization. His research interest focuses on the hierarchically structural analysis and phase transitions of soft materials using synchrotron-based infrared spectra, X-ray microscope and X-ray scattering and diffraction.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT We thank Ministry of Science and Technology, Taiwan, ATP” of National Chiao Tung University and Ministry of Education, Taiwan, for support.

REFERENCES (1) Heeger, A. J., Semiconducting polymers: the third generation. Chem. Soc. Rev. 2010, 39, 2354-2371. (2) Dou, L.; Liu, Y.; Hong, Z.; Li, G.; Yang, Y., Low-Bandgap Near-IR Conjugated Polymers/Molecules for Organic Electronics. Chem. Rev. 2015, 115, 12633-12665. (3) Wu, J.-S.; Cheng, S.-W.; Cheng, Y.-J.; Hsu, C.-S., Donor– acceptor conjugated polymers based on multifused ladder-type arenes for organic solar cells. Chem. Soc. Rev. 2015, 44, 1113-1154. (4) Ye, L.; Zhang, S.; Huo, L.; Zhang, M.; Hou, J., Molecular design toward highly efficient photovoltaic polymers based on two-dimensional conjugated benzodithiophene. Acc. Chem. Res. 2014, 47, 1595-1603. (5) Yuen, J. D.; Wudl, F., Strong acceptors in donor–acceptor polymers for high performance thin film transistors. Energy Environ Sci 2013, 6, 392-406. (6) Zhou, H.; Yang, L.; You, W., Rational design of high performance conjugated polymers for organic solar cells. Macromolecules 2012, 45, 607-632. (7) Robb, M. J.; Ku, S. Y.; Hawker, C. J., 25th Anniversary article: No assembly required: Recent advances in fully conjugated block copolymers. Adv. Mater. 2013, 25, 5686-5700. (8) Lei, T.; Dou, J. H.; Pei, J., Influence of Alkyl Chain Branching Positions on the Hole Mobilities of Polymer Thin-Film Transistors. Adv. Mater. 2012, 24, 6457-6461. (9) Mei, J.; Kim, D. H.; Ayzner, A. L.; Toney, M. F.; Bao, Z., Siloxane-terminated solubilizing side chains: bringing conjugated polymer backbones closer and boosting hole mobilities in thinfilm transistors. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 20130-20133. (10) Mei, J.; Bao, Z., Side chain engineering in solutionprocessable conjugated polymers. Chem. Mater. 2013, 26, 604615. (11) Lee, J.; Han, A.-R.; Yu, H.; Shin, T. J.; Yang, C.; Oh, J. H., Boosting the ambipolar performance of solution-processable polymer semiconductors via hybrid side-chain engineering. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 9540-9547. (12) Chen, S.; Sun, B.; Hong, W.; Aziz, H.; Meng, Y.; Li, Y., Influence of side chain length and bifurcation point on the crystalline structure and charge transport of diketopyrrolopyrrolequaterthiophene copolymers (PDQTs). J. Mater. Chem. C 2014, 2, 2183-2190. (13) Zhang, X.; Richter, L. J.; DeLongchamp, D. M.; Kline, R. J.; Hammond, M. R.; McCulloch, I.; Heeney, M.; Ashraf, R. S.; Smith, J. N.; Anthopoulos, T. D., Molecular packing of high-

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

mobility diketo pyrrolo-pyrrole polymer semiconductors with branched alkyl side chains. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 1507315084. (14) Fang, L.; Zhou, Y.; Yao, Y.-X.; Diao, Y.; Lee, W.-Y.; Appleton, A. L.; Allen, R.; Reinspach, J.; Mannsfeld, S. C.; Bao, Z., Sidechain engineering of isoindigo-containing conjugated polymers using polystyrene for high-performance bulk heterojunction solar cells. Chem. Mater. 2013, 25, 4874-4880. (15) Kline, R. J.; DeLongchamp, D. M.; Fischer, D. A.; Lin, E. K.; Richter, L. J.; Chabinyc, M. L.; Toney, M. F.; Heeney, M.; McCulloch, I., Critical role of side-chain attachment density on the order and device performance of polythiophenes. Macromolecules 2007, 40, 7960-7965. (16) Guo, C.; Hong, W.; Aziz, H.; Li, Y., Recent Progress in High Mobility Polymer Semiconductors for Organic Thin Film Transistors. Rev. Adv. Sci. Eng. 2012, 1, 200-224. (17) Cheng, Y.-J.; Yang, S.-H.; Hsu, C.-S., Synthesis of conjugated polymers for organic solar cell applications. Chem. Rev. 2009, 109, 5868-5923. (18) Li, Y.; Zou, Y., Conjugated polymer photovoltaic materials with broad absorption band and high charge carrier mobility. Adv. Mater. 2008, 20, 2952-2958. (19) Li, Y., Molecular design of photovoltaic materials for polymer solar cells: toward suitable electronic energy levels and broad absorption. Acc. Chem. Res. 2012, 45, 723-733. (20) Huo, L.; Hou, J., Benzo [1, 2-b: 4, 5-b′] dithiophenebased conjugated polymers: band gap and energy level control and their application in polymer solar cells. Polym. Chem. 2011, 2, 2453-2461. (21) Chueh, C.-C.; Li, C.-Z.; Jen, A. K.-Y., Recent progress and perspective in solution-processed Interfacial materials for efficient and stable polymer and organometal perovskite solar cells. Energy Environ Sci 2015, 8, 1160-1189. (22) Knopfmacher, O.; Hammock, M. L.; Appleton, A. L.; Schwartz, G.; Mei, J.; Lei, T.; Pei, J.; Bao, Z., Highly stable organic polymer field-effect transistor sensor for selective detection in the marine environment. Nat. Commun. 2014, 5. (23) Sista, S.; Hong, Z.; Chen, L.-M.; Yang, Y., Tandem polymer photovoltaic cells—current status, challenges and future outlook. Energy Environ Sci 2011, 4, 1606-1620. (24) Scharber, M.; Sariciftci, N., Efficiency of bulkheterojunction organic solar cells. Prog. Polym. Sci. 2013, 38, 1929-1940. (25) Scharber, M. C.; Muhlbacher, D.; Koppe, M.; Denk, P.; Waldauf, C.; Heeger, A. J.; Brabec, C. J., Design rules for donors in bulk-heterojunction solar cells-towards 10% energyconversion efficiency. Adv. Mater. 2006, 18, 789-794. (26) Zhang, Z.-G.; Li, Y., Side-chain engineering of highefficiency conjugated polymer photovoltaic materials. Sci. China Chem 2015, 58, 192-209. (27) Cui, C.; Wong, W.-Y.; Li, Y., Improvement of open-circuit voltage and photovoltaic properties of 2D-conjugated polymers by alkylthio substitution. Energy Environ Sci 2014, 7, 2276-2284. (28) Cui, C.; Guo, X.; Min, J.; Guo, B.; Cheng, X.; Zhang, M.; Brabec, C. J.; Li, Y., High-Performance Organic Solar Cells Based on a Small Molecule with Alkylthio-Thienyl-Conjugated Side Chains without Extra Treatments. Adv. Mater. 2015, 27, 74697475. (29) Lee, W. Y.; Giri, G.; Diao, Y.; Tassone, C. J.; Matthews, J. R.; Sorensen, M. L.; Mannsfeld, S. C.; Chen, W. C.; Fong, H. H.; Tok, J. B. H., Effect of Non-Chlorinated Mixed Solvents on Charge Transport and Morphology of Solution-Processed Polymer Field-Effect Transistors. Adv. Funct. Mater. 2014, 24, 35243534. (30) Matthews, J. R.; Niu, W.; Tandia, A.; Wallace, A. L.; Hu, J.; Lee, W.-Y.; Giri, G.; Mannsfeld, S. C.; Xie, Y.; Cai, S., Scalable synthesis of fused thiophene-diketopyrrolopyrrole semiconduct-

Page 14 of 19

ing polymers processed from nonchlorinated solvents into high Performance thin film transistors. Chem. Mater. 2013, 25, 782789. (31) Li, Y.; Sonar, P.; Singh, S. P.; Soh, M. S.; van Meurs, M.; Tan, J., Annealing-Free High-Mobility Diketopyrrolopyrrole− Quaterthiophene Copolymer for Solution-Processed Organic Thin Film Transistors. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 2198-2204. (32) Noriega, R.; Rivnay, J.; Vandewal, K.; Koch, F. P.; Stingelin, N.; Smith, P.; Toney, M. F.; Salleo, A., A general relationship between disorder, aggregation and charge transport in conjugated polymers. Nat. Mater. 2013, 12, 1038-1044. (33) Lee, J. K.; Ma, W. L.; Brabec, C. J.; Yuen, J.; Moon, J. S.; Kim, J. Y.; Lee, K.; Bazan, G. C.; Heeger, A. J., Processing additives for improved efficiency from bulk heterojunction solar cells. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 3619-3623. (34) Moon, J. S.; Takacs, C. J.; Cho, S.; Coffin, R. C.; Kim, H.; Bazan, G. C.; Heeger, A. J., Effect of Processing Additive on the Nanomorphology of a Bulk Heterojunction Material. Nano Lett. 2010, 10, 4005-4008. (35) Liao, H.-C.; Tsao, C.-S.; Shao, Y.-T.; Chang, S.-Y.; Huang, Y.-C.; Chuang, C.-M.; Lin, T.-H.; Chen, C.-Y.; Su, C.-J.; Jeng, U.S., Bi-hierarchical nanostructures of donor–acceptor copolymer and fullerene for high efficient bulk heterojunction solar cells. Energy Environ Sci 2013, 6, 1938-1948. (36) Liao, H.-C.; Tsao, C.-S.; Lin, T.-H.; Chuang, C.-M.; Chen, C.-Y.; Jeng, U.-S.; Su, C.-H.; Chen, Y.-F.; Su, W.-F., Quantitative Nanoorganized structural evolution for a high efficiency bulk heterojunction polymer solar cell. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 13064-13073. (37) Luo, C.; Kyaw, A. K. K.; Perez, L. A.; Patel, S.; Wang, M.; Grimm, B.; Bazan, G. C.; Kramer, E. J.; Heeger, A. J., General strategy for self-assembly of highly oriented nanocrystalline semiconducting polymers with high mobility. Nano Lett. 2014, 14, 2764-2771. (38) Tseng, H.-R.; Ying, L.; Hsu, B. B.; Perez, L. A.; Takacs, C. J.; Bazan, G. C.; Heeger, A. J., High mobility field effect transistors based on macroscopically oriented regioregular copolymers. Nano Lett. 2012, 12, 6353-6357. (39) Tseng, H. R.; Phan, H.; Luo, C.; Wang, M.; Perez, L. A.; Patel, S. N.; Ying, L.; Kramer, E. J.; Nguyen, T. Q.; Bazan, G. C., High-Mobility Field-Effect Transistors Fabricated with Macroscopic Aligned Semiconducting Polymers. Adv. Mater. 2014, 26, 2993-2998. (40) You, J.; Dou, L.; Yoshimura, K.; Kato, T.; Ohya, K.; Moriarty, T.; Emery, K.; Chen, C.-C.; Gao, J.; Li, G., A polymer tandem solar cell with 10.6% power conversion efficiency. Nat. Commun. 2013, 4, 1446. (41) Liao, S.-H.; Jhuo, H.-J.; Yeh, P.-N.; Cheng, Y.-S.; Li, Y.-L.; Lee, Y.-H.; Sharma, S.; Chen, S.-A., Single junction inverted polymer solar cell reaching power conversion efficiency 10.31% by employing dual-doped zinc oxide nano-film as cathode interlayer. Sci. Rep. 2014, 4. (42) Liu, Y.; Zhao, J.; Li, Z.; Mu, C.; Ma, W.; Hu, H.; Jiang, K.; Lin, H.; Ade, H.; Yan, H., Aggregation and morphology control enables multiple cases of high-efficiency polymer solar cells. Nat. Commun. 2014, 5. (43) Lei, T.; Dou, J.-H.; Cao, X.-Y.; Wang, J.-Y.; Pei, J., Electron-Deficient Poly (p-phenylene vinylene) Provides Electron Mobility over 1 cm2 V–1 s–1 under Ambient Conditions. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 12168-12171. (44) Chen, M. S.; Lee, O. P.; Niskala, J. R.; Yiu, A. T.; Tassone, C. J.; Schmidt, K.; Beaujuge, P. M.; Onishi, S. S.; Toney, M. F.; Zettl, A., Enhanced Solid-State Order and Field-Effect Hole Mobility through Control of Nanoscale Polymer Aggregation. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 19229-19236. (45) Lei, T.; Xia, X.; Wang, J.-Y.; Liu, C.-J.; Pei, J., “Conformation locked” strong electron-deficient poly (p-phenylene vi-

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 15 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

nylene) derivatives for ambient-stable n-type field-effect transistors: synthesis, properties, and effects of fluorine substitution position. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2014, 136, 2135-2141. (46) Tsao, H. N.; Cho, D. M.; Park, I.; Hansen, M. R.; Mavrinskiy, A.; Yoon, D. Y.; Graf, R.; Pisula, W.; Spiess, H. W.; Müllen, K., Ultrahigh mobility in polymer field-effect transistors by design. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 2605-2612. (47) Lei, T.; Cao, Y.; Fan, Y.; Liu, C.-J.; Yuan, S.-C.; Pei, J., High-performance air-stable organic field-effect transistors: isoindigo-based conjugated polymers. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2011, 133, 6099-6101. (48) Chen, H.; Guo, Y.; Yu, G.; Zhao, Y.; Zhang, J.; Gao, D.; Liu, H.; Liu, Y., Highly π-Extended Copolymers with Diketopyrrolopyrrole Moieties for High-Performance Field-Effect Transistors. Adv. Mater. 2012, 24, 4618-4622. (49) Yi, Z.; Wang, S.; Liu, Y., Design of High-Mobility Diketopyrrolopyrrole-Based π-Conjugated Copolymers for Organic Thin-Film Transistors. Adv. Mater. 2015, 27, 3589-3606. (50) Jackson, N. E.; Savoie, B. M.; Kohlstedt, K. L.; Olvera de la Cruz, M.; Schatz, G. C.; Chen, L. X.; Ratner, M. A., Controlling conformations of conjugated polymers and small molecules: The role of nonbonding interactions. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 10475-10483. (51) Jackson, N. E.; Savoie, B. M.; Kohlstedt, K. L.; Marks, T. J.; Chen, L. X.; Ratner, M. A., Structural and Conformational Dispersion in the Rational Design of Conjugated Polymers. Macromolecules 2014, 47, 987-992. (52) Huang, C.-F.; Chang, J.-Y.; Huang, S.-H.; Wu, K.-Y.; Jheng, J.-F.; Chuang, W.-T.; Hsu, C.-S.; Wang, C.-L., Polymorphisms and morphological studies of a difluorobenzothiadiazole conjugated copolymer with 7.8% polymer solar cell efficiency. J. Mater. Chem. A 2015, 3, 3968-3974. (53) Wu, K.-Y.; Chiu, C.-C.; Chuang, W.-T.; Wang, C.-L.; Hsu, C.-S., The backbone rigidity and its influence on the morphology and charge mobility of FBT based conjugated polymers. Polym. Chem. 2015, 6, 1309-1315. (54) Lee, T.-H.; Wu, K.-Y.; Lin, T.-Y.; Wu, J.-S.; Wang, C.-L.; Hsu, C.-S., Role of the comonomeric units in reaching linear backbone, high solid-state order and charge mobilities in heptacyclic arene-based alternating copolymers. Macromolecules 2013, 46, 7687-7695. (55) Chen, Y.-T.; Huang, T.-W.; Wang, C.-L.; Hsu, C.-S., Influences of the backbone randomness on the properties, morphology and performances of the fluorinated benzoselenadiazole– benzothiadiazole based random copolymers. Polym. Chem. 2015, 6, 3728-3736. (56) Rivnay, J.; Mannsfeld, S. C.; Miller, C. E.; Salleo, A.; Toney, M. F., Quantitative determination of organic semiconductor microstructure from the molecular to device scale. Chem. Rev. 2012, 112, 5488-5519. (57) Facchetti, A., Π-conjugated polymers for organic electronics and photovoltaic cell applications. Chem. Mater. 2010, 23, 733-758. (58) Huang, Y.; Guo, X.; Liu, F.; Huo, L.; Chen, Y.; Russell, T. P.; Han, C. C.; Li, Y.; Hou, J., Improving the Ordering and Photovoltaic Properties by Extending π–Conjugated Area of Electron-Donating Units in Polymers with D-A Structure. Adv. Mater. 2012, 24, 3383-3389. (59) Niedzialek, D.; Lemaur, V.; Dudenko, D.; Shu, J.; Hansen, M. R.; Andreasen, J. W.; Pisula, W.; Müllen, K.; Cornil, J.; Beljonne, D., Probing the Relation Between Charge Transport and Supramolecular Organization Down to Ångström Resolution in a Benzothiadiazole-Cyclopentadithiophene Copolymer. Adv. Mater. 2013, 25, 1939-1947. (60) Lu, X.; Hlaing, H.; Germack, D. S.; Peet, J.; Jo, W. H.; Andrienko, D.; Kremer, K.; Ocko, B. M., Bilayer order in a polycarbazole-conjugated polymer. Nat. Commun. 2012, 3, 795.

(61) Biniek, L.; Leclerc, N.; Heiser, T.; Bechara, R.; Brinkmann, M., Large scale alignment and charge transport anisotropy of pBTTT films oriented by high temperature rubbing. Macromolecules 2013, 46, 4014-4023. (62) Brinkmann, M., Directional epitaxial crystallization and tentative crystal structure of poly (9, 9'-di-n-octyl-2, 7-fluorene). Macromolecules 2007, 40, 7532-7541. (63) Brinkmann, M.; Gonthier, E.; Bogen, S. f.; Tremel, K.; Ludwigs, S.; Hufnagel, M.; Sommer, M., Segregated versus mixed interchain stacking in highly oriented films of naphthalene diimide bithiophene copolymers. ACS Nano 2012, 6, 10319-10326. (64) Olivier, Y.; Niedzialek, D.; Lemaur, V.; Pisula, W.; Müllen, K.; Koldemir, U.; Reynolds, J. R.; Lazzaroni, R.; Cornil, J.; Beljonne, D., 25th Anniversary Article: High-Mobility Hole and Electron Transport Conjugated Polymers: How Structure Defines Function. Adv. Mater. 2014, 26, 2119-2136. (65) Ren, X.-K.; Wu, Y.-C.; Wang, S.-J.; Jiang, S.-D.; Zheng, J.F.; Yang, S.; Chen, E.-Q.; Wang, C.-L.; Hsu, C.-S., Crystal structure and molecular packing behavior of poly (2, 3-diphenyl-1, 4phenylenevinylene) derivatives containing alkyl side-chains. Macromolecules 2012, 46, 155-163. (66) Brocorens, P.; Van Vooren, A.; Chabinyc, M. L.; Toney, M. F.; Shkunov, M.; Heeney, M.; McCulloch, I.; Cornil, J.; Lazzaroni, R., Solid-State Supramolecular Organization of Polythiophene Chains Containing Thienothiophene Units. Adv. Mater. 2009, 21, 1193-1198. (67) Miller, N. C.; Cho, E.; Junk, M. J.; Gysel, R.; Risko, C.; Kim, D.; Sweetnam, S.; Miller, C. E.; Richter, L. J.; Kline, R. J., Use of X-Ray Diffraction, Molecular Simulations, and Spectroscopy to Determine the Molecular Packing in a Polymer-Fullerene Bimolecular Crystal. Adv. Mater. 2012, 24, 6071-6079. (68) Giussani, E.; Brambilla, L.; Fazzi, D.; Sommer, M.; Kayunkid, N.; Brinkmann, M.; Castiglioni, C., Structural Characterization of Highly Oriented Naphthalene-Diimide-Bithiophene Copolymer Films via Vibrational Spectroscopy. J. Phys. Chem. B 2015, 119, 2062-2073. (69) Kayunkid, N.; Uttiya, S.; Brinkmann, M., Structural model of regioregular poly (3-hexylthiophene) obtained by electron diffraction analysis. Macromolecules 2010, 43, 4961-4967. (70) Fischer, F. S.; Kayunkid, N.; Trefz, D.; Ludwigs, S.; Brinkmann, M., Structural Models of Poly (cyclopentadithiophene-alt-benzothiadiazole) with Branched Side Chains: Impact of a Single Fluorine Atom on the Crystal Structure and Polymorphism of a Conjugated Polymer. Macromolecules 2015, 48, 39743982. (71) Müller, C.; Ferenczi, T. A.; Campoy-Quiles, M.; Frost, J. M.; Bradley, D. D.; Smith, P.; Stingelin-Stutzmann, N.; Nelson, J., Binary organic photovoltaic blends: a simple rationale for optimum compositions. Adv. Mater. 2008, 20, 3510-3515. (72) Ballantyne, A. M.; Ferenczi, T. A.; Campoy-Quiles, M.; Clarke, T. M.; Maurano, A.; Wong, K. H.; Zhang, W.; StingelinStutzmann, N.; Kim, J.-S.; Bradley, D. D., Understanding the influence of morphology on poly (3-hexylselenothiophene): PCBM solar cells. Macromolecules 2010, 43, 1169-1174. (73) Chen, C.-Y.; Tsao, C.-S.; Huang, Y.-C.; Liu, H.-W.; Chiu, W.-Y.; Chuang, C.-M.; Jeng, U.-S.; Su, C.-J.; Wu, W.-R.; Su, W.-F., Mechanism and control of the structural evolution of a polymer solar cell from a bulk heterojunction to a thermally unstable hierarchical structure. Nanoscale 2013, 5, 7629-7638. (74) Liu, F.; Gu, Y.; Wang, C.; Zhao, W.; Chen, D.; Briseno, A. L.; Russell, T. P., Efficient Polymer Solar Cells Based on a Low Bandgap Semi-crystalline DPP Polymer-PCBM Blends. Adv. Mater. 2012, 24, 3947-3951. (75) Cruz-Cabeza, A. J.; Bernstein, J., Conformational polymorphism. Chem. Rev. 2014, 114, 2170-2191.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

(76) Mas-Torrent, M.; Rovira, C., Role of molecular order and solid-state structure in organic field-effect transistors. Chem. Rev. 2011, 111, 4833-4856. (77) Wunderlich, B., Thermal analysis of polymeric materials. Springer, Berlin, 2005. (78) Bernal, J.; Fankuchen, I.; Perutz, M., An X-ray study of chymotrypsin and haemoglobin. Nature 1938, 141, 523-524. (79) Bragg, W., X-rays and Crystals. Nature 1913, 90, 572. (80) Laue, M. v., Kritische Bemerkungen zu den Deutungen der Photogramme von Friedrich und Knipping. Physik. Z. 1913, 14, 421-423. (81) van der Poll, T. S.; Love, J. A.; Nguyen, T. Q.; Bazan, G. C., Non-Basic High-Performance Molecules for Solution-Processed Organic Solar Cells. Adv. Mater. 2012, 24, 3646-3649. (82) Sun, Y.; Welch, G. C.; Leong, W. L.; Takacs, C. J.; Bazan, G. C.; Heeger, A. J., Solution-processed small-molecule solar cells with 6.7% efficiency. Nat. Mater. 2012, 11, 44-48. (83) Welch, G. C.; Bakus, R. C.; Teat, S. J.; Bazan, G. C., Impact of Regiochemistry and Isoelectronic Bridgehead Substitution on the Molecular Shape and Bulk Organization of Narrow Bandgap Chromophores. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 2298-2305. (84) Henson, Z. B.; Welch, G. C.; van der Poll, T.; Bazan, G. C., Pyridalthiadiazole-based narrow band gap chromophores. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 3766-3779. (85) Welch, G. C.; Perez, L. A.; Hoven, C. V.; Zhang, Y.; Dang, X.-D.; Sharenko, A.; Toney, M. F.; Kramer, E. J.; Nguyen, T.-Q.; Bazan, G. C., A modular molecular framework for utility in small-molecule solution-processed organic photovoltaic devices. J. Mater. Chem. 2011, 21, 12700-12709. (86) He, X.; Cao, B.; Hauger, T. C.; Kang, M.; Gusarov, S.; Luber, E. J.; Buriak, J. M., Donor–Acceptor Small Molecules for Organic Photovoltaics: Single-Atom Substitution (Se or S). ACS Appl. Mater. Interfaces 2015, 7, 8188-8199. (87) Ni, W.; Li, M.; Liu, F.; Wan, X.; Feng, H.; Kan, B.; Zhang, Q.; Zhang, H.; Chen, Y., Dithienosilole-Based Small-Molecule Organic Solar Cells with an Efficiency over 8%: Investigation of the Relationship between the Molecular Structure and Photovoltaic Performance. Chem. Mater. 2015, 27, 6077-6084. (88) Kan, B.; Zhang, Q.; Li, M.; Wan, X.; Ni, W.; Long, G.; Wang, Y.; Yang, X.; Feng, H.; Chen, Y., Solution-processed organic solar cells based on dialkylthiol-substituted benzodithiophene unit with efficiency near 10%. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2014, 136, 15529-15532. (89) Moss, G., Basic terminology of stereochemistry (IUPAC Recommendations 1996). Pure Appl. Chem. 1996, 68, 2193-2222. (90) Cheng, S. Z., Phase transitions in polymers: the role of metastable states: the role of metastable states. Elsevier: Amsterdam, 2008. (91) Pershan, P. S., Structure of liquid crystal phases. World Scientific, Singapore, 1988. (92) Chaloner, P.; Gunatunga, S.; Hitchcock, P., Redetermination of 2, 2'-bithiophene. Acta Crystallogr. Sect. C 1994, 50, 19411942. (93) Van Bolhuis, F.; Wynberg, H.; Havinga, E.; Meijer, E.; Staring, E. G., The X-ray structure and MNDO calculations of αterthienyl: A model for polythiophenes. Synth. Met. 1989, 30, 381389. (94) Antolini, L.; Horowitz, G.; Kouki, F.; Garnier, F., Polymorphism in oligothiophenes with an even number of thiophene subunits. Adv. Mater. 1998, 10, 382-385. (95) Horowitz, G.; Bachet, B.; Yassar, A.; Lang, P.; Demanze, F.; Fave, J.-L.; Garnier, F., Growth and characterization of sexithiophene single crystals. Chem. Mater. 1995, 7, 1337-1341. (96) Nagamatsu, S.; Kaneto, K.; Azumi, R.; Matsumoto, M.; Yoshida, Y.; Yase, K., Correlation of the number of thiophene units with structural order and carrier mobility in unsubstituted

Page 16 of 19

even-and odd-numbered α-oligothiophene films. J. Phys. Chem. B 2005, 109, 9374-9378. (97) Trotter, J., The crystal and molecular structure of biphenyl. Acta Crystallogr. 1961, 14, 1135-1140. (98) Baudour, J.; Toupet, L.; Delugeard, Y.; Ghemid, S., Transitions de phase structurales dans les polyphenyles. IX. Affinements des structures du p-terphenyle hydrogene a 200 K (diffraction des rayons X) et du biphenyle deutere a 40 K (diffraction des neutrons). Acta Crystallogr. Sect. C 1986, 42, 1211-1217. (99) Delugeard, Y.; Desuche, J.; Baudour, J., Structural transition in polyphenyls. II. The crystal structure of the hightemperature phase of quaterphenyl. Acta Crystallogr. Sect. B 1976, 32, 702-705. (100) Toussaint, C., Unit-cell dimensions and space group of some polyphenyls. Acta Crystallogr. 1966, 21, 1002-1003. (101) Baker, K. N.; Fratini, A. V.; Resch, T.; Knachel, H. C.; Adams, W.; Socci, E.; Farmer, B., Crystal structures, phase transitions and energy calculations of poly (p-phenylene) oligomers. Polymer 1993, 34, 1571-1587. (102) Heimel, G.; Puschnig, P.; Oehzelt, M.; Hummer, K.; Koppelhuber-Bitschnau, B.; Porsch, F.; Ambrosch-Draxl, C.; Resel, R., Chain-length-dependent intermolecular packing in polyphenylenes: a high pressure study. J. Phys.: Condens. Matter 2003, 15, 3375. (103) Rabideau, P. W.; Sygula, A.; Dhar, R. K.; Fronczek, F. R., The preferred U-conformation of m-quinquephenyl. An X-ray crystal structure determination and molecular mechanics study. J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun. 1993, 1795-1797. (104) van der Veen, M. H.; Rispens, M. T.; Jonkman, H. T.; Hummelen, J. C., Molecules with Linear π-Conjugated Pathways between All Substituents: Omniconjugation. Adv. Funct. Mater. 2004, 14, 215-223. (105) Bastiansen, O.; Samdal, S., Structure and barrier of internal rotation of biphenyl derivatives in the gaseous state: Part 4. Barrier of internal rotation in biphenyl, perdeuterated biphenyl and seven non-ortho-substituted halogen derivatives. J. Mol. Struct. 1985, 128, 115-125. (106) Zade, S. S.; Bendikov, M., Twisting of Conjugated Oligomers and Polymers: Case Study of Oligo-and Polythiophene. Chem. Eur. J. 2007, 13, 3688-3700. (107) Vujanovich, E. C.; Bloom, J. W.; Wheeler, S. E., Impact of Neighboring Chains on Torsional Defects in Oligothiophenes. J. Phys. Chem. A 2012, 116, 2997-3003. (108) Bloom, J. W.; Wheeler, S. E., Benchmark Torsional Potentials of Building Blocks for Conjugated Materials: Bifuran, Bithiophene, and Biselenophene. J. Chem. Theory Comput. 2014, 10, 3647-3655. (109) Williams, D. J.; Colquhoun, H. M.; O'Mahoney, C. A., The structure of poly (m-phenylene): a prediction from singlecrystal X-ray studies of m-deciphenyl and m-undeciphenyl. J. Chem. Soc., Chem. Commun. 1994, 1643-1644. (110) Hotta, S.; Goto, M.; Azumi, R.; Inoue, M.; Ichikawa, M.; Taniguchi, Y., Crystal structures of thiophene/phenylene cooligomers with different molecular shapes. Chem. Mater. 2004, 16, 237-241. (111) Mizuno, H.; Haku, U.; Marutani, Y.; Ishizumi, A.; Yanagi, H.; Sasaki, F.; Hotta, S., Single Crystals of 5, 5′-Bis (4′ -methoxybiphenyl-4-yl)-2, 2′-bithiophene for Organic Laser Media. Adv. Mater. 2012, 24, 5744-5749. (112) Hotta, S.; Goto, M.; Azumi, R., Peculiar Crystal Structure of a Thiophene/Phenylene Co-oligomer of 2, 5-Bis (4'methoxybiphenyl-4-yl) thiophene. Chem. Lett. 2007, 36, 270-271. (113) Mizuno, H.; Maeda, T.; Yanagi, H.; Katsuki, H.; Aresti, M.; Quochi, F.; Saba, M.; Mura, A.; Bongiovanni, G.; Sasaki, F., Optically Pumped Lasing from Single Crystals of a Cy-

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 17 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

ano-Substituted Thiophene/Phenylene Co-Oligomer. Adv. Opt. Mater. 2014, 2, 529-534. (114) Yamao, T.; Nishimoto, Y.; Terasaki, K.; Akagami, H.; Katagiri, T.; Hotta, S.; Goto, M.; Azumi, R.; Inoue, M.; Ichikawa, M., Single-crystal growth and charge transport properties of an alternating co-oligomer composed of thiophene and phenylene rings. Jpn. J. Appl. Phys. 2010, 49, 04DK20. (115) Takahashi, T.; Konno, T.; Ogata, K.; Fukuzawa, S.-i., Stereochemistry of Substitution of the α-Dimethylamino Group by Dialkylzinc in Chiral Benzylferrocene. J. Org. Chem. 2012, 77, 6638-6642. (116) Zhang, X.; Johnson, J. P.; Kampf, J. W.; Matzger, A. J., Ring fusion effects on the solid-state properties of αoligothiophenes. Chem. Mater. 2006, 18, 3470-3476. (117) Noh, Y.-Y.; Azumi, R.; Goto, M.; Jung, B.-J.; Lim, E.; Shim, H.-K.; Yoshida, Y.; Yase, K.; Kim, D.-Y., Organic field effect transistors based on biphenyl, fluorene end-capped fused bithiophene oligomers. Chem. Mater. 2005, 17, 3861-3870. (118) Siegrist, T.; Besnard, C.; Haas, S.; Schiltz, M.; Pattison, P.; Chernyshov, D.; Batlogg, B.; Kloc, C., A polymorph lost and found: the high-temperature crystal structure of pentacene. Adv. Mater. 2007, 19, 2079–2082. (119) Kakudate, T.; Yoshimoto, N.; Saito, Y., Polymorphism in pentacene thin films on SiO2 substrate. Appl. Phys. Lett. 2007, 90, 081903. (120) Sondermann, U.; Kutoglu, A.; Bassler, H., X-ray diffraction study of the phase transition in crystalline tetracene. J. Phys. Chem. 1985, 89, 1735-1741. (121) Yuan, Q.; Mannsfeld, S. C.; Tang, M. L.; Toney, M. F.; Lüning, J.; Bao, Z., Thin film structure of tetraceno [2, 3-b] thiophene characterized by grazing incidence X-ray scattering and near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure analysis. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2008, 130, 3502-3508. (122) Valiyev, F.; Hu, W.-S.; Chen, H.-Y.; Kuo, M.-Y.; Chao, I.; Tao, Y.-T., Synthesis and characterization of anthra [2, 3-b] thiophene and tetraceno [2, 3-b] thiophenes for organic field-effect transistor applications. Chem. Mater. 2007, 19, 3018-3026. (123) Heinrich, M. A.; Pflaum, J.; Tripathi, A. K.; Frey, W.; Steigerwald, M. L.; Siegrist, T., Enantiotropic polymorphism in di-indenoperylene. J. Phys. Chem. C 2007, 111, 18878-18881. (124) Brillante, A.; Bilotti, I.; Della Valle, R. G.; Venuti, E.; Girlando, A., Probing polymorphs of organic semiconductors by lattice phonon Raman microscopy. CrystEngComm 2008, 10, 937-946. (125) Brillante, A.; Bilotti, I.; Della Valle, R. G.; Venuti, E.; Milita, S.; Dionigi, C.; Borgatti, F.; Lazar, A. N.; Biscarini, F.; MasTorrent, M., The four polymorphic modifications of the semiconductor dibenzo-tetrathiafulvalene. CrystEngComm 2008, 10, 1899-1909. (126) Yamamoto, T.; Takimiya, K., Facile synthesis of highly π-extended heteroarenes, dinaphtho [2, 3-b: 2', 3'-f] chalcogenopheno [3, 2-b] chalcogenophenes, and their application to field-effect transistors. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2007, 129, 2224-2225. (127) Urbelis, J. H.; Swift, J. A., Phase-Selective Crystallization of Perylene on Monolayer Templates. Cryst. Growth Des. 2014, 14, 5244-5251. (128) Jiang, H.; Zhang, K. K.; Ye, J.; Wei, F.; Hu, P.; Guo, J.; Liang, C.; Chen, X.; Zhao, Y.; McNeil, L., Atomically Flat, Large-Sized, Two-Dimensional Organic Nanocrystals. Small 2013, 9, 990-995. (129) Hotta, S.; Waragai, K., Alkyl-substituted oligothiophenes: crystallographic and spectroscopic studies of neutral and doped forms. J. Mater. Chem. 1991, 1, 835-842. (130) Ashizawa, M.; Niimura, T.; Yu, Y.; Tsuboi, K.; Matsumoto, H.; Yamada, R.; Kawauchi, S.; Tanioka, A.; Mori, T., Improved stability of organic field-effect transistor performance in oli-

gothiophenes including β-isomers. Tetrahedron 2012, 68, 27902798. (131) Maunoury, J. C.; Howse, J. R.; Turner, M. L., Melt-Processing of Conjugated Liquid Crystals: A Simple Route to Fabricate OFETs. Adv. Mater. 2007, 19, 805-809. (132) Lovinger, A. J.; Katz, H. E.; Dodabalapur, A., Direct imaging of conducting and insulating submolecularly wide pathways in an organic semiconductor. Chem. Mater. 1998, 10, 32753277. (133) Reese, C.; Roberts, M. E.; Parkin, S. R.; Bao, Z., Tuning Crystalline Solid-State Order and Charge Transport via Building-Block Modification of Oligothiophenes. Adv. Mater. 2009, 21, 3678-3681. (134) Postnikov, V. A.; Odarchenko, Y. I.; Iovlev, A. V.; Bruevich, V. V.; Pereverzev, A. Y.; Kudryashova, L. G.; Sobornov, V. V.; Vidal, L.; Chernyshov, D.; Luponosov, Y. N., Molecularly Smooth Single-Crystalline Films of Thiophene–Phenylene CoOligomers Grown at the Gas–Liquid Interface. Cryst. Growth Des. 2014, 14, 1726-1737. (135) Takimiya, K.; Osaka, I.; Mori, T.; Nakano, M., Organic Semiconductors Based on [1] Benzothieno [3, 2-b][1] benzothiophene Substructure. Acc. Chem. Res. 2014, 47, 1493-1502. (136) Salaneck, W.; Inganäs, O.; Thémans, B.; Nilsson, J.; Sjögren, B.; Österholm, J. E.; Brédas, J.; Svensson, S., Thermochromism in poly (3-hexylthiophene) in the solid state: A spectroscopic study of temperature-dependent conformational defects. J. Chem. Phys 1988, 89, 4613-4619. (137) Maior, R. S.; Hinkelmann, K.; Eckert, H.; Wudl, F., Synthesis and characterization of two regiochemically defined poly (dialkylbithiophenes): a comparative study. Macromolecules 1990, 23, 1268-1279. (138) Barbarella, G.; Zambianchi, M.; Bongini, A.; Antolini, L., Crystal structure of 4, 4′, 3 ″, 4‴-Tetramethyl2, 2′: 5′, 2 ″: 5 ″, 2‴-tetrathiophene: A comparison with the conformation in solution. Adv. Mater. 1992, 4, 282-285. (139) Thomas, I. R.; Bruno, I. J.; Cole, J. C.; Macrae, C. F.; Pidcock, E.; Wood, P. A., WebCSD: the online portal to the Cambridge Structural Database. J. Appl. Crystallogr. 2010, 43, 362366. (140) Azumi, R.; Götz, G.; Debaerdemaeker, T.; Bäuerle, P., Coincidence of the Molecular Organization of β-Substituted Oligothiophenes in Two-Dimensional Layers and Three-Dimensional Crystals. Chem. Eur. J. 2000, 6, 735-744. (141) Azumi, R.; Mena-Osteritz, E.; Boese, R.; Benet-Buchholz, J.; Bäuerle, P., The longest oligothiophene ever examined by Xray structure analysis. J. Mater. Chem. 2006, 16, 728-735. (142) Liao, J. H.; Benz, M.; Legoff, E.; Kanatzidis, M. G., Oligothiophenes as models for polythiophenes. The crystal and molecular structures of 3 ″, 4 ″-dibutylpentathiophene and 3 ′, 3 ″″, 4′, 4 ″″-tetrabutylhexathiophene. Adv. Mater. 1994, 6, 135-138. (143) Surin, M.; Sonar, P.; Grimsdale, A. C.; Müllen, K.; De Feyter, S.; Habuchi, S.; Sarzi, S.; Braeken, E.; Ver Heyen, A.; Van der Auweraer, M., Solid-state assemblies and optical properties of conjugated oligomers combining fluorene and thiophene units. J. Mater. Chem. 2007, 17, 728-735. (144) Destri, S.; Pasini, M.; Botta, C.; Porzio, W.; Bertini, F.; Marchiò, L., Synthesis and crystal structure and optical properties of fluorenic-core oligomers. J. Mater. Chem. 2002, 12, 924933. (145) Huang, H.; Youn, J.; Ponce Ortiz, R.; Zheng, Y.; Facchetti, A.; Marks, T., Very large silacylic substituent effects on response in silole-based polymer transistors. Chem. Mater. 2011, 23, 2185-2200.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Chemistry of Materials

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

(146) Nielsen, C. B.; White, A. J.; McCulloch, I., Effect of fluorination of 2, 1, 3-benzothiadiazole. J. Org. Chem. 2015, 80, 50455048. (147) Stuart, A. C.; Tumbleston, J. R.; Zhou, H.; Li, W.; Liu, S.; Ade, H.; You, W., Fluorine substituents reduce charge recombination and drive structure and morphology development in polymer solar cells. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2013, 135, 1806-1815. (148) Osaka, I.; Shimawaki, M.; Mori, H.; Doi, I.; Miyazaki, E.; Koganezawa, T.; Takimiya, K., Synthesis, characterization, and transistor and solar cell applications of a naphthobisthiadiazolebased semiconducting polymer. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 3498-3507. (149) Berrouard, P.; Grenier, F.; Pouliot, J.-R.; Gagnon, E.; Tessier, C.; Leclerc, M., Synthesis and Characterization of 5Octylthieno [3, 4-c] pyrrole-4, 6-dione Derivatives As New Monomers for Conjugated Copolymers. Org. Lett. 2010, 13, 38-41. (150) Kim, C.; Liu, J.; Lin, J.; Tamayo, A. B.; Walker, B.; Wu, G.; Nguyen, T.-Q., Influence of structural variation on the solidstate properties of diketopyrrolopyrrole-based oligophenylenethiophenes: Single-crystal structures, thermal properties, optical bandgaps, energy levels, film morphology, and hole mobility. Chem. Mater. 2012, 24, 1699-1709. (151) Coughlin, J. E.; Zhugayevych, A.; Bakus, R. C.; van der Poll, T. S.; Welch, G. C.; Teat, S. J.; Bazan, G. C.; Tretiak, S., A Combined Experimental and Theoretical Study of Conformational Preferences of Molecular Semiconductors. J. Phys. Chem. C 2014, 118, 15610-15623. (152) Zhugayevych, A.; Postupna, O.; Bakus II, R. C.; Welch, G. C.; Bazan, G. C.; Tretiak, S., Ab Initio Study of a Molecular Crystal for Photovoltaics: Light Absorption, Exciton and Charge Carrier Transport. J. Phys. Chem. C 2013, 117, 4920-4930. (153) van der Poll, T. S.; Zhugayevych, A.; Chertkov, E.; Bakus, R. C.; Coughlin, J. E.; Teat, S. J.; Bazan, G. C.; Tretiak, S., Polymorphism of Crystalline Molecular Donors for SolutionProcessed Organic Photovoltaics. J. Phys. Chem. Lett. 2014, 5, 2700-2704. (154) Ungar, G., Structure of rotator phases in n-alkanes. J. Phys. Chem. 1983, 87, 689-695. (155) Takacs, C. J.; Sun, Y.; Welch, G. C.; Perez, L. A.; Liu, X.; Wen, W.; Bazan, G. C.; Heeger, A. J., Solar cell efficiency, selfassembly, and dipole–dipole interactions of isomorphic narrowband-gap molecules. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 16597-16606. (156) Love, J. A.; Nagao, I.; Huang, Y.; Kuik, M.; Gupta, V.; Takacs, C. J.; Coughlin, J. E.; Qi, L.; van der Poll, T. S.; Kramer, E. J., Silaindacenodithiophene-based molecular donor: morphological features and use in the fabrication of compositionally tolerant, high-efficiency bulk heterojunction solar cells. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2014, 136, 3597-3606. (157) Liu, Y.; Wan, X.; Wang, F.; Zhou, J.; Long, G.; Tian, J.; Chen, Y., High-Performance Solar Cells using a Solution-Processed Small Molecule Containing Benzodithiophene Unit. Adv. Mater. 2011, 23, 5387-5391. (158) Fitzner, R.; Mena-Osteritz, E.; Mishra, A.; Schulz, G.; Reinold, E.; Weil, M.; Körner, C.; Ziehlke, H.; Elschner, C.; Leo, K., Correlation of π-conjugated oligomer structure with film morphology and organic solar cell performance. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012, 134, 11064-11067. (159) Fitzner, R.; Elschner, C.; Weil, M.; Uhrich, C.; Körner, C.; Riede, M.; Leo, K.; Pfeiffer, M.; Reinold, E.; Mena-Osteritz, E., Interrelation between Crystal Packing and Small-Molecule Organic Solar Cell Performance. Adv. Mater. 2012, 24, 675-680. (160) Westenhoff, S.; Beenken, W. J.; Yartsev, A.; Greenham, N. C., Conformational disorder of conjugated polymers. J. Chem. Phys 2006, 125, 154903. (161) Rossi, G.; Chance, R.; Silbey, R., Conformational disorder in conjugated polymers. J. Chem. Phys 1989, 90, 7594-7601.

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

Page 18 of 19

Page 19 of 19

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60

Chemistry of Materials

TABLE OF CONTENTS IMAGES

ACS Paragon Plus Environment

19