Molecular Origin Of Electrical Conductivity In Gold-Polythiophene Hybrid Particle Films

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY LETTERS(2020)

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摘要
Hybrid electronic materials combine inorganic metals and semiconductors with p-conjugated polymers. The orientation of the polymer molecules in relation to the inorganic components is crucial for electrical material properties and device performance, but little is known of the configuration of p-conjugated polymers that bind to inorganic surfaces. Highly curved surfaces are common when using nanoscale components, for example, metal nanocrystal cores covered with conductive polymers. It is important to understand their effect on molecular arrangement. Here, we compare the molecular structures and electrical conductivities of well-defined nanoscale gold spheres and rods with shells of the covalently bound polythiophene PTEBS (poly[2-(3-thienyl)-ethyloxy-4-butylsulfonate]). We prepared aqueous sinter-free inks from the particles and printed them. The particles formed highly conductive films immediately after drying. Films with spherical metal cores consistently had 40% lower conductivities than films based on nanorods. Raman and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy revealed differences in the gold-sulfur bonds of PTEBS on rods and spheres. The fractions of bond sulfur groups implied differences in the alignment of PTEBS with the surface. More polymer molecules were bound in an edge-on configuration on spheres than on rods, where almost all polymers aligned "face-on" with the metal surface. This leads to different interface resistances: gold-polythiophene-gold interfaces between rods with p-p-tacked face-on PTEBS apparently foster electron transport along the surface-normal direction, while edge-on PTEBS does not. Molecular confinement thus increases the conductivity of hybrid inks based on highly curved nanostructures.
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