One-dimensional self-confinement promotes polymorph selection in large-area organic semiconductor thin films
Open Access
- 16 April 2014
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Springer Nature in Nature Communications
- Vol. 5 (1) , 3573
- https://doi.org/10.1038/ncomms4573
Abstract
A crystal’s structure has significant impact on its resulting biological, physical, optical and electronic properties. In organic electronics, 6,13(bis-triisopropylsilylethynyl)pentacene (TIPS-pentacene), a small-molecule organic semiconductor, adopts metastable polymorphs possessing significantly faster charge transport than the equilibrium crystal when deposited using the solution-shearing method. Here, we use a combination of high-speed polarized optical microscopy, in situ microbeam grazing incidence wide-angle X-ray-scattering and molecular simulations to understand the mechanism behind formation of metastable TIPS-pentacene polymorphs. We observe that thin-film crystallization occurs first at the air–solution interface, and nanoscale vertical spatial confinement of the solution results in formation of metastable polymorphs, a one-dimensional and large-area analogy to crystallization of polymorphs in nanoporous matrices. We demonstrate that metastable polymorphism can be tuned with unprecedented control and produced over large areas by either varying physical confinement conditions or by tuning energetic conditions during crystallization through use of solvent molecules of various sizes.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Tuning charge transport in solution-sheared organic semiconductors using lattice strainNature, 2011
- Gel-Induced Selective Crystallization of PolymorphsJournal of the American Chemical Society, 2011
- Highly sensitive flexible pressure sensors with microstructured rubber dielectric layersNature Materials, 2010
- Materials and Applications for Large Area Electronics: Solution-Based ApproachesChemical Reviews, 2010
- Crystal engineering of active pharmaceutical ingredients to improve solubility and dissolution ratesAdvanced Drug Delivery Reviews, 2007
- High-mobility bottom-contact n-channel organic transistors and their use in complementary ring oscillatorsApplied Physics Letters, 2006
- Ambipolar Organic Field‐Effect Transistors Based on a Solution‐Processed MethanofullereneAdvanced Materials, 2004
- Plastic transistors in active-matrix displaysNature, 2001
- Organic Field-Effect TransistorsAdvanced Materials, 1998
- The Ostwald Rule of StagesCrystal Research and Technology, 1995