Long-range exciton transport in conjugated polymer nanofibers prepared by seeded growth.
Xu-Hui JinMichael B PriceJohn R FinneganCharlotte E BoottJohannes M RichterAkshay RaoS Matthew MenkeRichard Henry FriendGeorge R WhittellIan MannersPublished in: Science (New York, N.Y.) (2018)
Easily processed materials with the ability to transport excitons over length scales of more than 100 nanometers are highly desirable for a range of light-harvesting and optoelectronic devices. We describe the preparation of organic semiconducting nanofibers comprising a crystalline poly(di-n-hexylfluorene) core and a solvated, segmented corona consisting of polyethylene glycol in the center and polythiophene at the ends. These nanofibers exhibit exciton transfer from the core to the lower-energy polythiophene coronas in the end blocks, which occurs in the direction of the interchain π-π stacking with very long diffusion lengths (>200 nanometers) and a large diffusion coefficient (0.5 square centimeters per second). This is made possible by the uniform exciton energetic landscape created by the well-ordered, crystalline nanofiber core.