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Open-shell Molecules: A Radical Design for Organic Optoelectronic Materials

Dr. Mark Chen, Lehigh University

Host: Dr. Mercedes Taylor & Dr. Leah Dodson


Abstract: Open-shell molecules possess unpaired electron density (radical character), which makes them intriguing candidate materials for many optoelectronic applications. Air- stable structures have been reported, but most require lengthy synthetic sequences with limited generality. Our lab has developed a concise synthetic strategy to rapidly access a variety of bisphenalenyls from commercial starting materials. We used this method to synthesize a neutral biradicaloid, Ph2-s-IDPL, and several novel heteroatom-substituted, π-radical cations. One such molecule is O-substituted (Ph2-PCPL)(OTf), which displays electrostatically-enhanced, intermolecular covalent-bonding interactions that impart remarkable charge transport properties. Specifically, we have discovered soluble derivatives that, when mixed with polystyrenesulfonate (PSS), enable the formation of water-processable, n-type conductive organic films that demonstrate high optical transparency (>94% transmission), electrical conductivity (σrt < 117 S/cm), and electron mobility (μe < 322 cm2 V-1 s-1). In these composites, PSS not only serves as a counterion, but also promotes n-doping and solution-phase aggregation, which leads to molecular ordering in solid-state. We have also discovered a N-substituted, red emissive, π-radical cation [(Ph2-PQPL)(OTf)] that is structurally distinct from all other reports of luminescent radicals, and achieves rare antiambipolar charge transport in field-effect transistors. N-substituted bisphenalenyls also display self-sensitized and reversible reactivity with dioxygen, which shows potential for applications for oxygen sensors and antimicrobial coatings.


Organic/Inorganic Seminar

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