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In Situ Formation of Pyridyl-Functionalized Poly(3-hexylthiophene)s via Quenching of the Grignard Metathesis Polymerization: ...

by William M Kochemba, Deanna L Pickel, Bobby G Sumpter, Jihua Chen, Sidney M Kilbey Ii
Publication Type
Journal
Journal Name
Chemistry of Materials
Publication Date
Page Numbers
4459 to 4467
Volume
24
Issue
22

The synthesis of well-defined, end-functional poly(3-hexylthiophene)s (P3HTs) by in situ quenching of the Grignard metathesis (GRIM) polymerization is complicated by the extreme tendency to favor difunctional products in all but a few cases. A facile one-pot method for preparing 2-pyridyl and 3-pyridyl P3HTs with high abundance of monofunctional products is established via an examination of the kinetics of the end-functionalization quenching reaction with lithium chloride complexes of 2- and 3-pyridyl Grignard reagents. Density functional theory calculations guide the selection of pyridine as the end group, which provides the capacity to ligate cadmium selenide (CdSe) nanocrystals and arrests aggregation upon thermal annealing when dispersed in a P3HT matrix. The relative abundances of various end-functional products, as ascertained by high-resolution matrix assisted laser desorption ionization time-of-flight mass spectrometry, can be altered through the use of 1-pentene as an additive: GRIM polymerizations quenched with 3-pyridyl and 2-pyridyl Grignard reagents show 5% and 18% abundances of difunctional, pyridyl-capped P3HTs, respectively, when 1-pentene is present at 1000:1 relative to the nickel catalyst. This represents a significant improvement compared to quenching with aryl Grignard reagents, where difunctional products predominate. The ability to manipulate end group compositions coupled with the propensity of pyridyl-functionalized P3HTs to ligate semiconductor quantum dots (SQDs) opens new possibilities for tuning the morphology of conjugated polymer/SQD blends.