(171e) Linking Molecular Conformation to Charge Transport in Organic Materials
AIChE Annual Meeting
2016
2016 AIChE Annual Meeting
Materials Engineering and Sciences Division
Organic, Polymeric, and Hybrid Semiconductors
Monday, November 14, 2016 - 1:56pm to 2:12pm
We use coarse-grained molecular dynamics simulations to simulate a variety of pristine morphologies of thiophene-based conjugated oligomers with different side-chain architectures and under various annealing protocols. The range of morphologies considered allows the analysis of several ordered and disordered structures, including hexagonally packed cylinders, ribbons and Ï?-stacked lamellar structures, depending on the processing conditions. The charge transport characteristics are then determined for these morphologies using a combination of atomistic backmapping, efficient semi-empirical quantum chemical calculations that bypass the requirement for density functional theory, and kinetic Monte Carlo simulations to elucidate the hole mobility dependence on side-chain architecture and annealing temperature. Percolation analysis is also used to identify the structures that allow for the most efficient charge transport through the device. This demonstrates a highly-flexible, modular pipeline that can be used to connect sub nano-scale morphology to bulk thin-film behavior, informing future charge transport investigations and manufacturing processes alike.
Our data echoes experimentally obtained trends concerning the hole mobility, namely that increased annealing temperature and regioregular side-chain placement improves charge transport. Using our methodology, we quantify this behavior and attribute these trends to regular side-chain architectures permitting the assembly into closely-packed Ï?-stacking crystals, amplifying the rate of inter-chain hopping, which is the limiting factor for efficient charge transport.