April 22 - 26, 2024
Seattle, Washington
May 7 - 9, 2024 (Virtual)
Symposium Supporters
2024 MRS Spring Meeting
SB04.10.01

Novel Extended Chromophores as Organic Transistor Materials

When and Where

Apr 25, 2024
3:30pm - 4:00pm
Room 435, Level 4, Summit

Presenter(s)

Co-Author(s)

John Anthony1

University of Kentucky1

Abstract

John Anthony1

University of Kentucky1
The field of organic electronics benefits from the synthetic diversity of conjugated chromophores, which can be further functionalized to tune everything from optical gap to crystal packing. The ability to vary structure allows an impressive variety of related compounds to be compared, enhancing our understanding of design rules for the development of new semiconductor materials. For example, we know that two-dimensional electronic coupling is critical to high-mobility devices, as is a layered / lamellar motif for the 2D interacting layers. Design guidelines beyond that are only now emerging - such as a desire for isotropic electronic coupling within the 2D interacting layers, and functionalization that minimizes core vibration in the solid state. With these emerging notions in mind, I will present an array of new and exotic aromatic backbones and functionalization schemes designed to further explore these newer potential design guidelines, to attempt to determine their impact on performance in organic transistors. In particular, the impact of chromophore twisting / curvature on charge transport studies will be discussed.

Keywords

organic | polymer | thin film

Symposium Organizers

Paddy K. L. Chan, University of Hong Kong
Katelyn Goetz, National Institute of Standards and Technology
Ulrike Kraft, Max Planck Institute for Polymer Research
Simon Rondeau-Gagne, University of Windsor

Symposium Support

Bronze
Journal of Materials Chemistry C
Proto Manufacturing

Session Chairs

Paddy K. L. Chan
Deepak Venkateshvaran

In this Session