Distance-resilient conductivity in p-doped polythiophenes
Journal article, 2025

Scalable organic electronic devices necessitate effective charge transport over long distances. We assess here the conductivity and its distance-resilience in doped polythiophene films with alkyl and oligoether side chains. We find that the polymers with oligoether side chains retain 80-90% of the conductivity over five orders of magnitude in distance (from tens of nanometers to millimeters), when doped with 2,3,5,6-tetrafluoro-tetracyanoquinodimethane (F(4)TCNQ). For P(g(4)2T-T) co-processed with F(4)TCNQ, this leads to an over 100 times enhanced long-range conductivity (43 S cm(-1)) compared to doped poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT, 0.2 S cm(-1)). Optimization of the oligoether side chain length and doping protocol pushes the conductivity to 330 S cm(-1). Kinetic Monte Carlo simulations of nanoscale terahertz conductivity data reveal that the local mobility of the doped P(g(4)2T-T):F(4)TCNQ film benefits from a higher dielectric constant (reduced Coulomb binding to the ionized dopant) and from lower energetic disorder. Those benefits persist on the macroscopic scale, while spatial charge confinement and a lack of connectivity hinder the long-range transport of moderately doped P3HT:F(4)TCNQ. However, strongly doping P3HT using magic blue leads to enhanced conductivity with distance-resilience >80%. The distance-resilience is generalized for different polymer:dopant systems once a highly conductive regime (>30 S cm(-1)) is reached. This highlights an effective strategy to overcome limitations in terms of electrostatic binding and multi-scale polymer ordering, enhancing both the short-range and the long-range conductivity of doped conjugated polymers.

Author

Eva Rock

University of Bern

Demetra Tsokkou

University of Bern

Basil Hunger

University of Bern

Maximilian M. Horn

University of Bern

Sepideh Zokaei

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Renee Kroon

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Jesika Asatryan

University of A Coruña

Jaime Martin

University of A Coruña

Christian Müller

Chalmers, Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Applied Chemistry

Martijn Kemerink

Heidelberg University

Natalie Banerji

University of Bern

Materials Horizons

2051-6347 (ISSN) 2051-6355 (eISSN)

Vol. In Press

Subject Categories (SSIF 2025)

Materials Chemistry

Condensed Matter Physics

DOI

10.1039/d5mh00620a

PubMed

40955593

More information

Latest update

9/26/2025