Air-stable organic semiconductors based on tetrathiafuluvalene (TTF) were developed by synthesising a series of dinaphthotetrathiafulvalene bisimides (DNTTF-Im) using electron-donating TTF, π-extended naphthalene, and electron-withdrawing imide. Electron-spin-resonance spectroscopy and X-ray single-crystal structure analysis of aryl-substituted DNTTF-Im radical cations confirmed that localisation of the spin resides on the electron-donating TTF moiety. The organic field-effect transistor properties derived from the use of highly crystalline n-butyl (C4) and n-hexyl(C6)-substituted DNTTF-Im were assessed. The hole carrier mobility of C6-DNTTF-Im was improved from 3.7×10 cm V s to 0.30 cm V s in ambient conditions. This is attributed to the raise of the substrate temperature from 25 °C to 200 °C during sublimation. The XRD and microscopy analysis suggested that increasing the substrate temperature accelerates the end-on packing resulting in larger grains suitable for hole charge transport parallel to the substrate.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/chem.201702657 | DOI Listing |
Chemistry
October 2017
Graduate School of Materials Science, Nara Institute of Science and Technology (NAIST), 8916-5 Takayama-cho, Ikoma, Nara, 630-0192, Japan.
Air-stable organic semiconductors based on tetrathiafuluvalene (TTF) were developed by synthesising a series of dinaphthotetrathiafulvalene bisimides (DNTTF-Im) using electron-donating TTF, π-extended naphthalene, and electron-withdrawing imide. Electron-spin-resonance spectroscopy and X-ray single-crystal structure analysis of aryl-substituted DNTTF-Im radical cations confirmed that localisation of the spin resides on the electron-donating TTF moiety. The organic field-effect transistor properties derived from the use of highly crystalline n-butyl (C4) and n-hexyl(C6)-substituted DNTTF-Im were assessed.
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