Double doping of conjugated polymers with monomer molecular dopants.
David KieferRenee KroonAnna I HofmannHengda SunXianjie LiuAlexander GiovannittiDominik StegererAlexander CanoJonna HynynenLiyang YuYadong ZhangDingqi NaiThomas F HarrelsonMichael SommerAdam J MouléMartijn KemerinkSeth R MarderIain McCullochMats FahlmanSimone FabianoChristian MüllerPublished in: Nature materials (2019)
Molecular doping is a crucial tool for controlling the charge-carrier concentration in organic semiconductors. Each dopant molecule is commonly thought to give rise to only one polaron, leading to a maximum of one donor:acceptor charge-transfer complex and hence an ionization efficiency of 100%. However, this theoretical limit is rarely achieved because of incomplete charge transfer and the presence of unreacted dopant. Here, we establish that common p-dopants can in fact accept two electrons per molecule from conjugated polymers with a low ionization energy. Each dopant molecule participates in two charge-transfer events, leading to the formation of dopant dianions and an ionization efficiency of up to 200%. Furthermore, we show that the resulting integer charge-transfer complex can dissociate with an efficiency of up to 170%. The concept of double doping introduced here may allow the dopant fraction required to optimize charge conduction to be halved.