2020 Virtual AIChE Annual Meeting
(495i) Role of Interfacial Electronic Interactions in Graphene-Directed Assembly of Conjugated Polymers
Authors
In this talk, we present graphene as a novel substrate in templating self-assembly of conjugated polymers and demonstrate the effects of the resulting interfacial electronic interaction on both conjugated polymer as well as graphene. By utilizing meniscus-guided solution coating technique, we assembled monolayer films of two donor-acceptor polymers, PII-2T and DPP-BTZ, on graphene and silicon substrates. While atomic force microscopy revealed higher fiber density and higher film coverage of PII-2T monolayer films on graphene, grazing incidence X-ray diffraction revealed that graphene results in higher crystallinity and higher alignment of polymer chains. In addition to the morphological variation due to polymer-graphene interaction, photoelectron spectroscopy measurements showed lowering of binding energies of core electrons in various atoms present in the polymer chain as well as Fermi level movement to highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) level, both of which suggest p-type doping of the polymer. This effect was exaggerated in the case of polymers assembled on fluorinated graphene where presence of electronegative fluorine atoms must have increased the p-type doping phenomenon of the polymer. The presence of electronic interaction between the conjugated polymer and graphene-based substrates and the resulting electronic structure modification on both sides of the interface was also corroborated by Raman spectroscopy and UV-Vis spectroscopy.