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Self-Assembly of Supramolecular Fullerene Ribbons via Hydrogen-Bonding Interactions and Their Impact on Fullerene Electronic Interactions and Charge Carrier Mobility

78

Citations

62

References

2010

Year

Abstract

The anisotropy of the electronic interactions between fullerenes in crystalline solids was examined using a confocal fluorescence microscope by probing the polarization of the fluorescence emission arising from fullerene excimer-like emitting states. Crystals of C(60) obtained by vacuum-sublimation or from chloroform solution exhibited no or little polarization (p = 0 or 0.11, respectively), as expected from the high symmetry of the C(60) fcc lattice or the low degree of anisotropy induced by included solvent molecules. The use of hydrogen-bonding to supramolecularly control interfullerene electronic interactions was explored using a fullerene derivative (1) combining a solubilizing 3,4-di-tert-butylbenzene group and a barbituric acid hydrogen-bonding (H-B) moiety. The crystal structure of 1 establishes the existence of fullerene H-B tapes along which interfullerene electronic interactions are expected to be large. In agreement with this, we observe very strong polarization of the fullerene excimer-like emission (p = 0.78), indicative of a high degree of anisotropy in the fullerene interactions. The charge-carrier mobility of 1 as determined from OFET devices was found to be lower than that of C(60) (1.2 x 10(-4) vs 1.2 x 10(-2) cm(2)/s V), which is rationalized on the basis of the reduced dimensionality of 1 as a wire-like semiconductor and variations in the morphology of the device active layer revealed by AFM measurements.

References

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