RESUMO
Since the Nobel prize winning discovery that polyacetylene could act as a semiconductor, there has been tremendous efforts dedicated to understanding and harnessing the unusual properties of ð-conjugated polymers. Much of this research has focused on the preparation of oligoynes and polyynes with well-defined numbers of repeating alkyne units as models for carbyne. These studies are usually hampered by a structure-property relationship where the stability of the resulting materials decrease with the incorporation of additional alkyne units. Here, we describe a series of oligoynes, with up to 12 alkyne units, where electron-rich [Pt(PBu3)2]2+ units are incorporated into the center of oligoyne backbones which are capped by electron-poor BF2 formazanate dyes. These compounds exhibit excellent stability and solubility, panchromatic absorption, and redox activity characteristic of their structural components. These traits facilitated thin-film studies of extended oligoyne materials, where it is shown that incorporating [Pt(PBu3)2]2+ units leads to smoother films, decreased conductivity on the microscale, and increased conductivity on the nanoscale when compared to metal-free analogs. Remarkably, our oligoynes have superior conductivity compared to the ubiquitous poly(3-hexylthiophene) semiconductor.
RESUMO
ð-Conjugated polymers, including those based on acetylenic repeating units, are an exciting class of materials that offer narrow optical band gaps and tunable frontier orbital energies that lead to their use in organic electronics. This work expands the knowledge of structure-property relationships of acetylenic polymers through the synthesis and characterization of a series of Glaser-Hay-coupled model compounds and random copolymers comprised of BF2 formazanate, fluorene, and/or bis(alkoxy)benzene units. The model compounds and copolymers synthesized exhibit redox activity associated with the reversible reduction of the BF2 formazanate units and the irreversible reduction of the fluorene and bis(alkoxy)benzene units. The copolymers exhibit absorption profiles characteristic or intermediate of their respective models and homopolymers, leading to broad absorption of UV-vis light. The alkyne linkages of the model compounds and copolymers are reacted with [Co2(CO)8] to convert the alkyne functional groups into cobalt carbonyl clusters. This transformation leads to blue-shifted absorption profiles due to a decrease in π-conjugation, demonstrating the ability to tune the properties of these materials through post-polymerization functionalization. The redox activity and broad absorption bands of the polymers reported make them excellent candidates for use in photovoltaics and other light-harvesting applications.
RESUMO
Oligoynes and polyynes are 1D chains of conjugated sp-hybridized carbon atoms consisting of alternating single and triple bonds. Their stability rapidly decreases with increasing chain length beyond only a few repeating units. Design strategies, such as the use of bulky end-capping groups, allow for their characterization and isolation while not contributing significantly to their physical properties. In this study, we incorporate redox-active BF2 formazanate dyes (BF2 ) as end-caps to prepare symmetric (BF2 -[C≡C]n -BF2 ) and asymmetric (BF2 -[C≡C]n -Si(iPr)3 ) families of oligoynes containing up to 10 alkyne units. In doing so, we introduce stable oligoynes that possess a blend of optical and redox properties that cannot be achieved by either oligoynes or BF2 formazanates individually (e.g., panchromatic absorption, multiple and tunable reversible redox waves). This approach is transferable to other functional end-caps to facilitate the preparation of π-conjugated materials with utility in the organic electronics arena.