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1.
Macromol Rapid Commun ; 45(16): e2400331, 2024 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38875278

ABSTRACT

Stretchable conjugated polymers with conjugation break spacers (CBSs) synthesized via random terpolymerization have gained considerable attention because of their efficacy in modulating mobility and stretchability. This study incorporates a series of dianhydrohexitol diastereomers of isosorbide (ISB) and isomannide (IMN) units into the diketopyrrolopyrrole-based backbone as CBSs. It is found that the distorted CBS (IMN) improves the mobility-stretchability properties of the polymer with a highly coplanar backbone, whereas the extended CBS (ISB) enhances those of the polymer with a noncoplanar backbone. Additionally, the different configurations of ISB and IMN sufficiently affect the solid-state packing, aggregation capabilities, crystallographic parameters, and mobility-stretchability properties of the polymer. The IMN-based polymers exhibit the highest mobility of 1.69 cm2 V-1 s-1 and crystallinity retentions of (85.7, 78.6)% under 20% and 60% strains, outperforming their ISB-based or unmodified counterparts. The improvement is correlated with a robust aggregation capability. Furthermore, the CBS content affects aggregation behavior, notably affecting mobility. This result indicates that incorporating CBSs into the polymer can enhance backbone flexibility via movement and rotation of the CBS without affecting the crystalline regions.


Subject(s)
Polymers , Pyrroles , Polymers/chemistry , Polymers/chemical synthesis , Pyrroles/chemistry , Stereoisomerism , Molecular Structure , Polymerization , Ketones/chemistry
2.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37897701

ABSTRACT

The development of intrinsically stretchable n-type semiconducting polymers has garnered much interest in recent years. In this study, three biobased dianhydrohexitol epimers of isosorbide (ISB), isomannide (IMN), and isoidide (IID), derived from cellulose, were incorporated into the backbone of a naphthalenediimide (NDI)-based n-type semiconducting polymer as conjugation break spacers (CBSs). Accordingly, three polymers were synthesized through the Migita-Kosugi-Stille coupling polymerization with NDI, bithiophene, and CBSs, and the mobility-stretchability properties of these polymers were investigated and compared with those of their analogues with conventional alkyl-based CBSs. Experimental results showed that the different configurations of these epimers in CBSs sufficiently modulate the melt entropies, surface aggregation, crystallographic parameters, chain entanglements, and mobility-stretchability properties. Comparable ductility and edge-on preferred stacking were observed in polymers with endo- or exo-configurations in IMN- and IID-based polymers. By contrast, ISB with endo-/exo-configurations exhibits an excellent chain-realigning capability, a reduced crack density, and a proceeding bimodal orientation under tensile strain. Therefore, the ISB-based polymer exhibits high orthogonal electron mobility retention of (53 and 56)% at 100% strain. This study is one of the few examples where biobased moieties are incorporated into semiconducting polymers as stress-relaxation units. Additionally, this is the first study to report on the effect of stereoisomerism of epimers on the morphology and mobility-stretchability properties of semiconducting polymers.

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