Poly(p-phenylene vinylene) (PPV, or polyphenylene vinylene) is a conducting polymer of the rigid-rod polymer family. PPV is the only polymer of this type that can be processed into a highly ordered crystalline thin film. PPV and its derivatives are electrically conducting upon doping. Although insoluble in water, its precursors can be manipulated in aqueous solution. The small optical band gap and its bright yellow fluorescence makes PPV a candidate in applications such as light-emitting diodes (LED) and photovoltaic devices.[1] Moreover, PPV can be doped to form electrically conductive materials.[citation needed] Its physical and electronic properties can be altered by the inclusion of functional side groups.
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Other names
poly(1,4-phenylene-1,2-ethenediyl)
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Identifiers | |
ChemSpider |
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Properties | |
(C8H6)n | |
Appearance | Yellow solid |
Insoluble | |
Except where otherwise noted, data are given for materials in their standard state (at 25 °C [77 °F], 100 kPa).
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Preparation
editPPVs can be synthesized by a variety of methods, the details of which determine purity and molecular weight. The most popular methods proceed via p-xylylene intermediates after a base induced elimination from α,α'-disubstituted para-xylenes.[1]
Other methods
editAlthough xylylene-based routes dominate the synthetic methodology, many other routes have been evaluated.[citation needed]
Step growth routes
editPPV can be synthesized by Wittig-type couplings between the bis(ylide) derived from an aromatic bisphosphonium salt and dialdehyde, especially 1,4-benzenedialdehyde.
Step growth coupling reactions, such as this Wittig condensation, usually yield low molecular weight oligomer with 5-10 repeat units. Incorporation of various side groups (alkyl, alkoxy, or phenyl) increases the solubility of the polymer and gives higher molecular weights. An advantage of the step-polymerization approach is that ortho-, meta-, and para-xylylene linkages can be incorporated in the main chain. Copolymers of defined stereoregularity can also be easily made in this way.[citation needed]
PPV derivatives can be also produced via the Knoevenagel condensation between a benzylic nitrile and an aromatic dialdehyde. Since this method produces many side reactions, such as hydrolysis of nitrile group, careful optimization of the reaction conditions was needed.
Heck coupling routes
editThe couplings of ethylene with a variety of aromatic dibromides via a Heck reaction give reasonable molecular weights (3,000-10,000) when solubilizing groups present. However, this method requires one of the gaseous starting materials to be added in precise amounts, In excess polyethylene could be formed.
Ring-opening routes
editA bicyclooctadiene compound has been coupled by ring-opening metathesis polymerization (ROMP) to give a precursor polymer of high molecular weight and soluble in organic solvents. This polymer can be deposited as thin films and converted thermally to PPV. Lower conversion temperatures could be employed with the presence of an amine catalyst.
A modification of the ROMP route to PPV used a silyl-substituted paracyclophane derivative. Transformation into PPV could be achieved by elimination of the silyloxy group followed by thermal treatment or treating the precursor polymer with acid. The advantage of this method is that polymers and block copolymers of well-defined molecular weight can be easily prepared.
Structure and properties
editHighly oriented PPV films obtained by the soluble polymeric precursor route usually have P21 symmetry with a monoclinic unit cell containing two monomer units: c (chain axis) = 0.658, a = 0.790, b = 0.605 nm, and α (monoclinic angle) = 123o (Figure 1). The structural organization of PPV chains resembles that found in other highly oriented rigid-rod polymers, where the molecules are oriented along the fiber axis (often the stretching direction) but with partial axial translational disorder.[2]
PPV is a diamagnetic material and has a very low intrinsic electrical conductivity, on the order of 10-13 S/cm.[1] The electrical conductivity increases upon doping with iodine, ferric chloride, alkali metals, or acids. However, the stability of these doped materials is relatively low. In general, unaligned, unsubstituted PPV presents only moderate conductivity with doping, ranging from <<10-3 S/cm (I2 doped) to 100 S/cm (H2SO4-doped).[1] Draw ratios of up to 10 are possible. Alkoxy-substituted PPVs are generally easier to oxidize than the parent PPV and hence have much higher conductivities. Longer side chains lower the conductivity and hinder interchain hopping of charge carriers.
Aspirational uses
editDue to its stability, processability, and electrical and optical properties, PPV has been considered for a wide variety of applications.[1] In 1989 the first polymer-based light emitting diode (LED) was discovered using PPV as the emissive layer.[3] Polymers are speculated to have advantages over molecular materials in LEDs, such as ease of processing, reduced tendency for crystallization, and greater thermal and mechanical stability. Ever since the first breakthrough in 1989, a large number of PPV derivatives have been synthesized and used for LED applications. Although solid-state lasing has yet to be demonstrated in an organic LED, poly[2-methoxy-5-(2'-ethylhexyloxy)-p-phenylene vinylene] (MEH-PPV) has been proven to be a promising laser dye due to its high fluorescence efficiency in solution.[4]
Polyphenylene vinylene is electroluminescent, suggesting applications in polymer-based organic light emitting diodes. PPV was used as the emissive layer in the first polymer light-emitting diodes.[3] Devices based on PPV emit yellow-green light, and derivatives of PPV obtained by substitution are often used when light of a different color is required. In presence of even a small amount of oxygen, singlet oxygen is formed during operation, by energy transfer from the excited polymer molecules to oxygen molecules. These oxygen radicals then attack the structure of the polymer, leading to its degradation.[citation needed]
PPV has also been investigated as an electron-donor in organic solar cells.[5] PPV-based devices however suffer from poor absorption and photodegradation.[6]
References
edit- ^ a b c d e Moratti SC (1998). "The chemistry and uses of Polyphenylenevinylens". In Skotheim TA, Elsenbaumer RL, Reynolds JR (eds.). Handbook of conducting polymers (2nd ed.). New York: M. Dekker. pp. 343–351. ISBN 978-0-8247-0050-8.
- ^ Granier T, Thomas EL, Gagnon DR, Karasz FE, Lenz RW (December 1986). "Structure investigation of poly (p-phenylene vinylene)". Journal of Polymer Science Part B: Polymer Physics. 24 (12): 2793–2804. Bibcode:1986JPoSB..24.2793G. doi:10.1002/polb.1986.090241214.
- ^ a b Burroughes JH, Bradley DD, Brown AR, Marks RN, Mackay K, Friend RH, et al. (October 1990). "Light-emitting diodes based on conjugated polymers". Nature. 347 (6293): 539–541. Bibcode:1990Natur.347..539B. doi:10.1038/347539a0. S2CID 43158308.
- ^ Moses D (June 1992). "High quantum efficiency luminescence from a conducting polymer in solution: A novel polymer laser dye". Applied Physics Letters. 60 (26): 3215–3216. Bibcode:1992ApPhL..60.3215M. doi:10.1063/1.106743.
- ^ Li J, Sun N, Guo ZX, Li C, Li Y, Dai L, et al. (2002). "Photovoltaic Devices with Methanofullerenes as Electron Acceptors". The Journal of Physical Chemistry B. 106 (44): 11509–11514. doi:10.1021/jp025973v.
- ^ Sariciftci NS, Braun D, Zhang C, Srdanov VI, Heeger AJ, Stucky G, Wudl F (February 1993). "Semiconducting polymer-buckminsterfullerene heterojunctions: Diodes, photodiodes, and photovoltaic cells". Applied Physics Letters. 62 (6): 585–587. Bibcode:1993ApPhL..62..585S. doi:10.1063/1.108863.