A semiconducting organic radical cationic host-guest complex

  • Albert C. Fahrenbach
  • , Srinivasan Sampath
  • , Dattatray J. Late
  • , Jonathan C. Barnes
  • , Samuel L. Kleinman
  • , Nicholas Valley
  • , Karel J. Hartlieb
  • , Zhichang Liu
  • , Vinayak P. Dravid
  • , George C. Schatz
  • , Richard P. Van Duyne
  • , J. Fraser Stoddart

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

47 Scopus citations

Abstract

The self-assembly and solid-state semiconducting properties of single crystals of a trisradical tricationic complex composed of the diradical dicationic cyclobis(paraquat-p-phenylene) (CBPQT2(•+)) ring and methyl viologen radical cation (MV•+) are reported. An organic field effect transistor incorporating single crystals of the CBPQT 2(•+)⊂MV•+ complex was constructed using lithographic techniques on a silicon substrate and shown to exhibit p-type semiconductivity with a mobility of 0.05 cm2 V-1 s -1. The morphology of the crystals on the silicon substrate was characterized using scanning electron microscopy which revealed that the complexes self-assemble into "molecular wires" observable by the naked-eye as millimeter long crystalline needles. The nature of the recognition processes driving this self-assembly, radical-radical interactions between bipyridinium radical cations (BIPY•+), was further investigated by resonance Raman spectroscopy in conjunction with theoretical investigations of the vibrational modes, and was supported by X-ray structural analyses of the complex and its free components in both their radical cationic and dicationic redox states. These spectroscopic investigations demonstrate that the bond order of the BIPY•+ radical cationic units of host and guest components is not changed upon complexation, an observation which relates to its conductivity in the solid-state. We envision the modularity inherent in this kind of host-guest complexation could be harnessed to construct a library of custom-made electronic organic materials tailored to fit the specific needs of a given electronic application.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)9964-9971
Number of pages8
JournalACS nano
Volume6
Issue number11
DOIs
StatePublished - Nov 27 2012

Keywords

  • electrochemistry
  • molecular electronics
  • organic field effect transistors
  • quantum mechanics
  • Raman spectroscopy

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