AI Article Synopsis

  • The researchers developed a framework that connects measurements of polymer structure at the mesoscale with molecular-level models to better understand how material properties change across different scales.
  • They focused on semiconducting polymers, revealing that defects and the arrangement of molecular chains significantly influence charge transport, often leading to unexpected behaviors in mobility and charge distribution.
  • The approach also allowed for virtual modifications of the polymer's microstructure, suggesting that improving chain stiffness and alignment enhances performance, while local uniformity does not have a beneficial effect.

Article Abstract

A grand challenge in materials science is to identify the impact of molecular composition and structure across a range of length scales on macroscopic properties. We demonstrate a unified experimental-theoretical framework that coordinates experimental measurements of mesoscale structure with molecular-level physical modeling to bridge multiple scales of physical behavior. Here we apply this framework to understand charge transport in a semiconducting polymer. Spatially-resolved nanodiffraction in a transmission electron microscope is combined with a self-consistent framework of the polymer chain statistics to yield a detailed picture of the polymer microstructure ranging from the molecular to device relevant scale. Using these data as inputs for charge transport calculations, the combined multiscale approach highlights the underrepresented role of defects in existing transport models. Short-range transport is shown to be more chaotic than is often pictured, with the drift velocity accounting for a small portion of overall charge motion. Local transport is sensitive to the alignment and geometry of polymer chains. At longer length scales, large domains and gradual grain boundaries funnel charges preferentially to certain regions, creating inhomogeneous charge distributions. While alignment generally improves mobility, these funneling effects negatively impact mobility. The microstructure is modified in silico to explore possible design rules, showing chain stiffness and alignment to be beneficial while local homogeneity has no positive effect. This combined approach creates a flexible and extensible pipeline for analyzing multiscale functional properties and a general strategy for extending the accesible length scales of experimental and theoretical probes by harnessing their combined strengths.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9674245PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2204346119DOI Listing

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