Synchrotron-based X-ray scattering measurements of phase-separated surfactant monolayers at the air-water interface provide molecular-level structural information about the packing and ordering of film components. In this work, grazing incidence X-ray diffraction (GIXD) and X-ray reflectivity (XR) measurements were used to collect crystallographic structural information for binary mixed monolayers of arachidic acid (AA, CHCOOH) with perfluorotetradecanoic acid (PA, CFCOOH), a system that has previously been investigated using a variety of thermodynamic and micron-scale structural characterization methods. GIXD measurements at surface pressures of π = 5, 15, and 30 mN/m indicated that AA in pure and mixed films forms a rectangular lattice at π = 5 and 15 mN/m but a hexagonal lattice at π = 30 mN/m.
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July 2017
Low-band-gap organic semiconductors are important in a variety of organic electronics applications, such as organic photovoltaic devices, photodetectors, and field effect transistors. Building on our previous work, which introduced 7-azaisoindigo as an electron-deficient building block for the synthesis of donor-acceptor organic semiconductors, we demonstrate how Lewis acids can be used to further tune the energies of the frontier molecular orbitals. Coordination of a Lewis acid to the pyridinic nitrogen of 7-azaisoindigo greatly diminishes the electron density in the azaisoindigo π-system, resulting in a substantial reduction in the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) energy.
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