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Conjugated Polymers Part 1 Winter 2016 O O

Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

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Page 1: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Conjugated Polymers Part 1

Winter 2016

O

O

Page 2: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Properties of Metals and Semiconductors

http://pedia.educdz.com/Encyclopedia_of_Chemical_Physics_and_Physical_Chemistry/a1_3.htm

Ignor    Bands are half filled

Fully filled (occupied)

Empty (unoccupied)

Page 3: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Polyacetylene – A Classic Conjugated Polymer

•  Two possible structures•  Top structure every C is

equivalent all have 1 unpaired electron

•  Metallic (unpaired = free electrons)

•  Bottom – No unpaired electrons•  Results in filled and unfilled pi-

orbitals•  Which is correct?•  Evidence presented in reading

–  Bond-length–  Electronic structure

(-CH-)n

(-CH=CH-)n

Page 4: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Consequence of having paired electrons

•  HOMO-LUMO level narrows as conjugation length is increased

•  Begins to saturate

•  We’ll see many experimental examples of this

•  Note that it is not possible to ‘close’ gap and form a metal with a neutral species

Page 5: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Polyacetylene: Band Structure

•  Pi-band is not continuous•  filled and unfilled pi-orbital

and a gap between the frontier orbitals

•  HOMOs and LUMOs•  Analogous to gap between

the valance and conduction levels in semiconductors

•  Polyacetylene and most neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors!

•  Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal

Page 6: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Polyacetylene Synthesis

•  Two forms cis and trans•  Trans = 2 C’s in repeat unit•  Cis = 4 C’s in repeat unit•  Low temperature synthesis

leads to cis isomer•  Thermal isomerization to

the trans conformation•  Characterization?

•  Further heating leads to cross-linking and decomposition

Trans Cis

Zeigler-Natta-Type Route

Page 7: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Shirakawa Halogenation

•  Chlorination produces a mixture of isomers•  Elimination of H-X to make graphite

•  Several curious observations:–  Film changed color with trace (sub stoichiometric) amount of Cl2–  Upon continued reaction becomes clearer

Page 8: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Structure of Polyacetylene

•  Half filled not stable•  Dimerizes•  Bond-lengths alternate•  All trans (transoid) form

is most thermodynamically stable

•  All trans has the smallest HOMO-LUMO gap

•  Degenerate A and B phases

Page 9: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Polyacetylene can be doped!

•  Change in the oxidation state that is de-localized through out the molecule

•  Large number of redox sites•  Both p- and n-type doping

possible•  Either gain electron or loose

electron

•  Loosing a electron also called gaining a hole

•  Acts as a charge carrier•  Carriers populate mid-gap

states

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

Un-Doped (neutral)

P-doped (oxidized)

I-­‐  

δ+  

δ+  

δ+  

δ+  

δ+  

Page 10: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Doping in Polyacetylene

•  Polyacetylene has an “A” and “B” form that are degenerate

•  Consider mid-chain defect from the A to the B form

•  Mobile because of the translational symmetry of the chain

•  Results in new molecular orbital

•  A non-bonding orbital in the middle of the HOMO-LUMO gap

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

Page 11: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Band Picture of Solitons

•  Consider charge storage (negative or positive)

•  Generates a single new mid-gap state (non-bonding) Nature of state determines charge

•  Empty = positive•  Occupied = negative•  Experimental evidence:

optical properties change with doping concentration

•  New low energy transition in polymer

New mid-gap state

Negative Positive

Positive Soliton

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

Page 12: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Experimental Evidence: Chemical Doping Increases Conductivity

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

H

Un-Doped (neutral)

Doped    

I-­‐  

δ+  

δ+  

δ+  

δ+  

δ+  

Page 13: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Charge Storage on Conjugated Chain

•  Doping is similar to reduction/oxidation•  Because of delocalization it changes the band structure of the

polymers (conduction and valance band or pi and pi* bands)

•  Solitons occur when the ground state is degenerate (two bond alternating forms are equal in energy)

•  Polarons and bipolarons occur when it is non-degenerate

•  There are negative, positive and neutral types of solitons•  Negative and positive polarons

•  Note the spin-charge relationship is different for solitons and polarons

Page 14: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Poly(phenylene vinylene) Ground State Electronic Structure

•  In the case of PPV: 8 pi-electrons – 8 pi bands 4 filled, 4 empty

•  A and B forms are not degenerate!•  Common for all polymers except polyacetylene•  Another consequence is the that ground and excited state

have different geometry•  Ground state resembles the aromatic A form•  Excited resembles the quinoid B form•  Ground state is related to bonding; pi (also HOMO)•  Excited state is related to antibonding; pi* (also LUMO)

Page 15: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Polarons in Conjugated Polymers

•  Polarons occur in any polymer where the A and B phases are not degenerate (Basically aromatic conjugated polymers)

•  Mid gap states hybridize to form two new mid gap states

•  Electron polaron shown•  Polaron is the combination of a neutral and

charged soliton•  Both charged and spin = ½ (usual charge

vs. spin arrangement for fermions)•  Example: 1 electron reduction of a polymer

with a non-degenerate ground state; a radical anion

a)  Scheme of negative and positive polaron in polyphenylene

b)  Band diagram of negative polaron

+ -

Page 16: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Bipolarons in Conjugated Polymers

•  Bipolarons also occur in any polymer where the A and B phases are not degenerate (basically most other conjugated polymers)

•  Bipolaron is the bound state of two solitons of like charge

•  Negative bipolaron shown•  Charge = +/- 2e and spin = 0•  Example: 2 electron reduction of a polymer

with a non-degenerate ground state; a dianion

•  All four electrons are in two mid-gap orbitals

•  Dication - Two mid gap orbitals are present but unoccupied

a)  Shows negative bipolaron

b)  Shows band diagram of negative bipolaron

- -

Page 17: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Photo-Doping

•  When exposed to energy greater than pi-pi* gap

•  Electron can be promoted from pi to pi* by absorption of a photon

•  No dopant ions are involved in this process

•  A positive and negative site are generated

•  They quickly recombine when the source of energy is removed

•  May re-emit photon (fluorescence)

•  Loose energy non-radiatively

Page 18: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Charge Injection

•  Charge injection occurs at a metal/polymer interface

•  Two types of “charge carriers”

•  Electrons into pi* orbitals

•  holes into pi orbitals•  Major mechanism of conduction in

polymer films is thermal hopping, as opposed to tunneling

•  Holes and electrons are attracted to one another

•  Often recombine to generate a photon - electroluminescence

•  Other relaxation pathways do not lead to emission

Polymer Film

Typically 100-300 nm thick

Page 19: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Polyaniline

•  The as-synthesized polymer consists of alternating oxidized and reduced forms

•  This is the most stable form

•  Termed half oxidized or “emeraldine base”

•  Insulating

•  Becomes highly conductive at low pH

Page 20: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

A Closer Look at the Oxidation States

Y = 0.5 (Emeraldine) half oxidized

Y = 1 (Leucomeraldine) fully reduced

Consider three possible Y values

Y = 0 (Pernigraniline) fully oxidized

Can refer to the free base form or salt form

Page 21: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Acid-Base Doping: Polyaniline

•  Protonate most basic nitrogens

•  Product is not the same as the fully reduced polymer

•  Note the charge on the repeat unit

•  Number of electrons have not changed

•  Acid-doped polyanaline

Page 22: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Chemical Doping: Polyaniline

•  Start with the fully reduced polymer

•  Add chlorine

•  Changes the oxidation state of the polymer

•  Total number of electrons have not changed

Page 23: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Photoexcitation: Molecular Semiconductors with Non-degenerate Ground State

•  Optical absorption generates charge carriers•  Ground state electron is promoted to excited state

•  Pi-electron is promoted to pi* level•  Formation of positive and negative charge species (overall neutral)

•  Bound electron-hole pair or exciton •  Often recombine to generate a photon – fluorescence•  Other relaxation pathways do not lead to emission

Polymer Film

Page 24: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Describing photoexcitation in conjugated polymers

•  Consider excitation with light grater in energy than pi-pi* gap•  Generates a vacancy in the pi-band and a new species in the

pi*-band

•  Can either be described as pair of charged free (+ and -) polarons, or neutral exciton

–  Electron-hole pairs are well screened electron-hole pairs (common in inorganic semiconductors; materials with high dielectric constant and delocalized conduction band)

–  Excitons are strongly bound electron-hole pairs (common in molecular semiconductors; materials with low dielectric constants and localized pi* band)

Page 25: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Photoinduced Charge Transfer

•  Occurs between donor and acceptor

•  Distance dependent•  Thermodynamic driving force

•  Electrons go downhill

•  Holes go uphill

Page 26: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Soluble Semiconducting Polymers•  Although all conjugated polymers can be doped (positively), the doped

form is often not stable, difficult to control (and maintain) doping level, not stable

•  Polyacetylene is a ‘rigid-rod’ not soluble•  Influenced by environmental factors (oxygen, water)•  Field move towards soluble, stable semiconducting polymers•  A means of developing “plastic electronics”•  Poly(phenylene vinylene)s •  Poly(thiophene)s •  Clarifying some of the terms:

–  Valance and conduction bands describes inorganic semiconductors–  Pi and pi* levels and HOMO and LUMO levels used to describe

molecular and polymer semiconductors–  Strictly speaking: ionization potential and electron affinity are

correct–  The term ‘band-gap’ is should only be used in the case when the

species has a true band structure.

Page 27: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Poly(phenylene vinylene) PPV Synthesis

•  PPV is insoluble•  Soluble precursor

route shown•  Wessling and

Zimmerman method

•  Generates a soluble polymer precursor

•  >100,000 Mw•  Precursor can be

deposited from solution or melt-processed

Cl

Cl

S+

S+

S+ S+

S

1) NaOH 2) Acid

Dialysis n

Heat

Counter ions not shown

Page 28: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

The Origins of Soluble PPV

•  From the Wessling and Zimmerman Method

•  Methoxy chains change physical properties, melting temperature

•  Partial eliminated product is soluble

•  Increasing the entropy of the repeat unit should make rod-like polymers more soluble.

S+

S+

S+

S+

OCH3

H3CO

+

OCH3

H3CO

OCH3

H3CO

OCH3

H3CO

OCH3

H3CO

OCH3

H3CO

OCH3

H3CO

S+

Page 29: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

MEH-PPV: A Soluble Conjugated Polymer

•  Note that each repeat unit has a branched alkoxy chain•  Each is chiral, but atactic •  Last step using Wessling Zimmerman Method

MeO

OH

MeO

O

MeO

OCl

ClMeO

O

KOH

R-XR =

HCHO

HCl (g)

Page 30: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Synthesis of Soluble Phenylene Vinylenes

•  Dissordered polymer•  The chromophore is the light

absorbing species

•  Collection of chromophores due to imperfections in the polymer chains, defect etc.

•  Soluble•  Able to be processed

•  Dominated conjugated poly research in 1990’s

O

OMEH-PPV

Page 31: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Photophysics: Phenylene Vinylenes

O

O

MEH-­‐PPV  

•  Photons with energy above the absorption edge frequency create excitons

•  Ground and excited state have different equilibrium structure

•  Electronic couples to Vibronic•  Most CPs exhibit a significant

“stokes shift” •  Emission energy is lower than

absorption energy–  loss of energy to thermal

relaxation in the excited state–  Migration to a low energy site

•  Some materials exhibit anti-stokes behavior, gain energy from surrounding media or matrix

Page 32: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Photophysics: Phenylene Vinylenes

O

O

MEH-PPV

•  Strong light absorbers and emitters

•  Exhibits absorption and fluorescence anisotropy (Chains aligned in polyethylene matrices)

•  Maximum absorption/emission when chains parallel to incident light

•  Note that low energy absorption overlaps with high energy emission

•  Vibronic structure in both absorption and emission

X  80  

Absorption Emission

Page 33: Conjugated Polymers Part 1 · neutral conjugated polymers are semiconductors! • Disappointing if the goal is molecular metal. Polyacetylene Synthesis • Two forms cis and trans

Photophysics: Phenylene Vinylenes

O

O

MEH-PPV

•  Very significant stokes shift (0.2-0.3 eV)

•  Compare with molecular dyes (~0.05 eV)

•  Why?•  Some from vibrational

relaxation – generally polymers (soluble ones) have more degrees of freedom than small molecules dyes

•  Excitons are mobile and can migrate to a region of low energy (defect, or extended conjugation)