Precise size control of semiconducting nanomaterials from polymers is crucial for optoelectronic applications, but the low solubility of conjugated polymers makes this challenging. Herein, we prepared length-controlled semiconducting one-dimensional (1D) nanoparticles by synchronous self-assembly during polymerization. First, we succeeded in unprecedented living polymerization of highly soluble conjugated poly(3,4-dihexylthiophene). Then, block copolymerization of poly(3,4-dihexylthiophene)--polythiophene spontaneously produced narrow-dispersed 1D nanoparticles with lengths from 15 to 282 nm according to the size of a crystalline polythiophene core. The key factors for high efficiency and length control are a highly solubilizing shell and slow polymerization of the core, thereby favoring nucleation elongation over isodesmic growth. Combining kinetics and high-resolution imaging analyses, we propose a unique mechanism called crystallization-driven nanoparticlization of conjugated polymers (CD-INCP) where spontaneous nucleation creates seeds, followed by seeded growth in units of micelles. Also, we achieved "living" CD-INCP through a chain-extension experiment. We further simplified CD-INCP by adding both monomers together in one-shot copolymerization but still producing length-controlled nanoparticles.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/jacs.1c13385 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!