Synthesis and characterization of polyfluorene-based photoelectric materials: the effect of coil segment on the spectral stability†
Abstract
The origin of the low-energy emission of fluorene-based rod-coil block copolymers still remains controversial. In this work, a series of polyfluorene-based rod-coil block copolymers having different coil segments, i.e., poly[2,7-(9,9-dihexylfluorene)]-block-poly(2,2,3,3,4,4,4-heptafluorobutyl methacrylate, (PF-b-PHFBMA), PF-b-poly(butylmethacrylate) (PF-b-PBMA), PF-b-poly(2-hydroxyethyl methacrylate) (PF-b-PHEMA) and PF-b-poly(acrylic acid) (PF-b-PAA), were synthesized using the ATRP technique. The optical and surface properties and thermal behaviors of these copolymers were systematically investigated. In particular, different thermal treatment conditions, including annealing temperature, annealing time and annealing atmosphere were introduced to study the effect of coil segment on the copolymer spectral stability. The incorporation of PBMA, PHEMA and PAA segments to PF could indeed improve the copolymer spectral stability, while the PHFBMA block brought undesirable low-energy emission. In addition, water contact angle (WCA) measurements of the copolymer films before and after annealing further demonstrated that the low-energy emission of PF-based rod-coil block copolymers was attributed to the molecular aggregation rather than the formation of fluorenone defects.