Simultaneously achieving high optical transparency and excellent charge mobility in semiconducting polymers has presented a challenge for the application of these materials in future "flexible" and "transparent" electronics (FTEs). Here, by blending only a small amount (∼15 wt %) of a diketopyrrolopyrrole-based semiconducting polymer (DPP2T) into an inert polystyrene (PS) matrix, we introduce a polymer blend system that demonstrates both high field-effect transistor (FET) mobility and excellent optical transparency that approaches 100%. We discover that in a PS matrix, DPP2T forms a web-like, continuously connected nanonetwork that spreads throughout the thin film and provides highly efficient 2D charge pathways through extended intrachain conjugation. The remarkable physical properties achieved using our approach enable us to develop prototype high-performance FTE devices, including colorless all-polymer FET arrays and fully transparent FET-integrated polymer light-emitting diodes.
CITATION STYLE
Yu, K., Park, B., Kim, G., Kim, C. H., Park, S., Kim, J., … Lee, K. (2016). Optically transparent semiconducting polymer nanonetwork for flexible and transparent electronics. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 113(50), 14261–14266. https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1606947113
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