Molecular “backbone surgery” of electron-deficient heteroarenes based on dithienopyrrolobenzothiadiazole: conformation-dependent crystal structures and charge transport properties

Electron-deficient heteroarenes based on dithienopyrrolobenzothiadiazole (BTP) have been highly attractive due to their fascinating packing structures, broad absorption profiles, and promising applications in non-fullerene organic solar cells. However, the control of their crystal structures for superior charge transport still faces big challenges. Herein, a conformation engineering strategy is proposed to rationally manipulate the single crystal structure of BTP-series heteroarenes. The parent molecule BTPO-c has a 3D network crystal structure, which originates from its banana-shaped conformation. Subtracting one thiophene moiety from the central backbone leads to a looser brickwork crystal structure of the derivative BTPO-z because of its interrupted angular-shaped conformation. Further subtracting two thiophene moieties results in the derivative BTPO-l with a compact 2D-brickwork crystal structure due to its quasi-linear conformation with a unique dimer packing structure and short π–π stacking distance (3.30 Å). Further investigation of charge-transport properties via single-crystal organic transistors demonstrates that the compact 2D-brickwork crystal structure of BTPO-l leads to an excellent electron mobility of 3.5 cm2 V−1 s−1, much higher than that of BTPO-c with a 3D network (1.9 cm2 V−1 s−1) and BTPO-z with a looser brickwork structure (0.6 cm2 V−1 s−1). Notably, this study presents, for the first time, an elegant demonstration of the tunable single crystal structures of electron-deficient heteroarenes for efficient organic electronics.


This article is Open Access



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