Conjugated-polymer grafting on inorganic and organic substrates: A new trend in organic electronic materials

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Abstract

This review highlights recent developments in the grafting of conjugated polymers onto various substrates for organic electronic devices. The rapid development of multi-layer architectures demands the preparation of well-defined interfaces between both compatible and incompatible materials. It is promising therefore that interface-engineering is now known to help passivate charge trap states, control energy level alignments, enhance charge extraction, guide active-layer morphologies, and improve material compatibility, adhesion and device stability. In organic electronic devices, conjugated polymers are in contact with a wide range of constituents, such as metals, metal oxides, organic materials, and inorganic particles. Covalent bonds between these materials and macromolecules are desired to yield intimate contacts and well-defined interfaces. Following an overview of the various synthetic methodologies of conjugated polymers, the chemistry of tethering macromolecular chains onto nanoparticles and flat surfaces is described. The creation of functional hybrid materials offers the potential to deliver efficient and low-cost devices.

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Bousquet, A., Awada, H., Hiorns, R. C., Dagron-Lartigau, C., & Billon, L. (2014). Conjugated-polymer grafting on inorganic and organic substrates: A new trend in organic electronic materials. Progress in Polymer Science. Elsevier Ltd. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.progpolymsci.2014.03.003

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