Journal of the American Chemical Society, Vol.128, No.22, 7264-7276, 2006
Intrachain electron transfer in conducting oligomers and polymers: The mixed valence approach
Organic mixed valence compounds consisting of bisdiarylamino charge-bearing units with an oligothiophene bridge and oligothiophene radical cations have been compared using molecular modeling. The study has been performed with oligomers of 1 to 22 thiophene units. These two series of molecules have several properties in common, and intramolecular Single Electron Transfer ( SET) in both series can be described within the same theoretical framework. Conducting oligomer radical cations and slightly doped conducting polymers appear as special cases of the vast ensemble of organic mixed valence compounds. Short oligomers are class III, whereas longer oligomers and conducting polymers are class II. Therefore, doped conducting polymers cannot be correctly modeled using oligomers with a short conjugation length. Experimental evidence extracted from the literature confirms these findings. Single electron transfer theories can thus be used when studying interchain and intrachain electron transfer in slightly doped conducting polymers and in materials consisting of short oligomers. This makes it possible to extract from the UV-vis-near-IR spectra the electron-transfer constant rate along or between the pi-conjugated chain. The main differences among inorganic, organic, and conducting oligomer or polymer mixed valence compounds lies in the H-ab and lambda values associated with these different series. Inorganic mixed valence compounds have small H-ab and lambda values; organic mixed valence compounds have large H-ab and lambda values, whereas conducting oligomers and polymers have large H-ab but small lambda values. This induces charge delocalization to occur for systems larger than those of inorganic and nitrogen-centered organic mixed valence compounds.