Synthesis and Aggregation Behavior of a Glycolated Naphthalene Diimide Bithiophene Copolymer for Application in Low-Level n-Doped Organic Thermoelectrics

Younghun Shin(Chemnitz University of Technology), Hartmut Komber(Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research), Davide Caiola(Italian Institute of Technology), Marco Cassinelli(Italian Institute of Technology), Hengda Sun(Linköping University), Dominik Stegerer(Chemnitz University of Technology), Marcel Schreiter(Chemnitz University of Technology), K Horatz(Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research), Franziska Lissel(Leibniz Institute of Polymer Research), Xuechen Jiao(Monash University), Christopher R. McNeill(Monash University), Simone Cimò(Italian Institute of Technology), Chiara Bertarelli(Italian Institute of Technology), Simone Fabiano(Linköping University), Mario Caironi(Italian Institute of Technology), Michael Sommer(Chemnitz University of Technology)
Macromolecules
July 1, 2020
Cited by 33Open Access
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Abstract

The synthesis of a naphthalene diimide bithiophene copolymer P(EO-NDIT2) with branched, base-stable, and purely ether-based side chains is presented. Stille polycondensation leads to high molecular weights that are limited by methyl transfer and eventually T2 homocouplings. While extensive solution aggregation hampers molecular weight determination by conventional methods, NMR spectroscopy allows identification of both T2- (H and methyl) and NDI-related (methyl) end groups, enabling the determination of absolute number average molecular weights larger than Mn,NMR ∼100 kg/mol. Solvent- and temperature-dependent aggregation in solution is investigated by NMR and UV–vis spectroscopy. These results are used for solution doping of P(EO-NDIT2) with N-benzimidazole-based n-dopants. Spin coating from heated chlorobenzene solutions and using 4-(2,3-dihydro-1,3-dimethyl-1H-benzoimidazol-2-yl)-N,N-diisopropylaniline (N-DiPrBI) as the dopant leads to homogeneous films with highest conductivities up to 10–2 S/cm. Generally, N-DiPrBI concentrations as low as ∼5 wt % are sufficient to increase conductivity by orders of magnitude. Strikingly, maximum power factors up to 0.11 μW/mK2, although limited by conductivity, are achieved for the highest molar mass sample at a low dopant concentration of 2 wt % N-DiPrBI only.


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