Charge carrier transport in thin conjugated polymer films: influence of morphology and polymer/substrate interactions

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Abstract

The performance of conjugated polymer (CP)-based electronic devices relies on optimal charge carrier mobilities, which are determined by monomeric architecture, degree of polymerization, chain conformation, and the nano- and mesoscale morphologies. With regard to the latter, we discuss two effects that have received limited attention in the literature, yet important for device performance optimization: (1) the role of morphological disorder and of CP/substrate interactions on the in-plane and out-of-plane carrier transport in CPs; (2) the impact of morphological disorder on charge transfer at the CP/substrate interface. The emergence of film thickness-dependent carrier mobilities, varying over two orders of magnitude within a length scale of 200 nm, and band-bending phenomena, extending tens of nanometers within the CP, are associated with these effects. These findings suggest areas for further research in order to enable widespread applications of next-generation CP-based devices. Graphical abstract[Figure not available: see fulltext.]

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Dong, B. X., Wenderott, J. K., & Green, P. F. (2021). Charge carrier transport in thin conjugated polymer films: influence of morphology and polymer/substrate interactions. Colloid and Polymer Science, 299(3), 439–456. https://doi.org/10.1007/s00396-020-04725-1

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