1. Field of the Invention
The present invention relates to a helical-polyacetylene, more specifically, a novel helical-polyacetylene used in a conductive polymer material that can be applied to, for example, an electronic device or an optical device.
2. Description of the Related Art
Recently, organic electronic devices such as transistors and light-emitting devices using organic materials have attracted attention. Many of such organic electronic devices using conjugated polymers can be produced from solutions and can be therefore produced in low costs. Furthermore, application of a solution can easy increase the area thereof and is also advantageous.
Organic electronic devices using conjugated polymers have a possibility of practical application as monomolecular devices each using a single polymer, not an assembly of polymers.
As an example of the conjugated polymer, International Patent Application No. WO 2004/029111 A1 discloses a helical-polyacetylene and a method of producing the helical-polyacetylene. This patent literature discloses a polyacetylene having a helical conjugated structure due to n electrons based on a double bond and including a phenyl group having various functional groups on an end thereof and discloses an assembly of pseudo-hexagonal structures.
In the case of applying such a helical-polyacetylene to a device, the material may be required to have high stiffness. When a helical-polyacetylene having high stiffness is used in an electronic device, it is expected, for example, to form a monomolecular device that bridges between source and drain electrodes with an isolated single-molecule. It is also expected to impart better electric conduction characteristics to a device by that a regular helical structure of a single polymer molecule is formed due to the high stiffness and, thereby, that conduction of a carrier is prevented from being affected by, for example, a disturbance of the structure.
Aspects of the present invention provide a helical-polyacetylene having high stiffness and a device using the helical-polyacetylene.
The helical-polyacetylene according to an aspect of the present invention is a helical-polyacetylene whose main chain has a helical structure. The helical-polyacetylene has carbon double bonds constituting the main chain and side chains composed of aromatic five- or six-membered rings each binding to one carbon atom of the respective carbon double bonds. In the atoms constituting the five- or six-membered ring, two atoms binding to the atom that directly binds to the carbon atom of the main chain bind only any of five or six atoms constituting the five- or six-membered ring. In the atoms constituting the five- or six-membered ring, at least one atom located most distant from the atom that directly binds to the carbon atom of the main chain is carbon.
According to aspects of the present invention, a helical-polyacetylene having high stiffness and a device using the helical-polyacetylene can be provided.
Further features of the present invention will become apparent from the following description of exemplary embodiments with reference to the attached drawings.
The embodiments of the present invention will now be described in detail.
The helical-polyacetylene according to an aspect of the present invention is a helical-polyacetylene whose main chain has a helical structure. The helical-polyacetylene has carbon double bonds constituting the main chain and side chains composed of aromatic five- or six-membered rings each binding to one carbon atom of the respective carbon double bonds. In the atoms constituting the five- or six-membered ring, two atoms binding to the atom that directly binds to the carbon atom of the main chain bind only any of five or six atoms constituting the five- or six-membered ring. In the atoms constituting the five- or six-membered ring, at least one atom located most distant from the atom that directly binds to the carbon atom of the main chain is carbon.
In the atoms constituting the five- or six-membered ring, the two atoms binding to the atom that directly binds to the carbon atom of the main chain can be the same or different two atoms selected from nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur.
The aromatic six-membered ring can be a pyrimidine ring, and the pyrimidine ring can bind to the main chain in such a manner that the two nitrogen atoms bind to the carbon atom that directly binds to a carbon atom of the main chain.
The aromatic five-membered ring can be an oxazole ring or a thiazole ring.
The side chain can be a condensed aromatic ring where the five- or six-membered ring is coordinated to another aromatic ring by sharing a bond.
The chemical formula and structure of a helical-polyacetylene of an aspect of the present invention will now be described as an embodiment of the present invention to show that this helical-polyacetylene has high stiffness.
The helical-polyacetylene is briefly described below.
Throughout the specification, expressions of carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, and sulfur denote the respective atoms.
The helical-polyacetylene according to an aspect of the present invention will now be described.
As an example of the helical-polyacetylene according to an aspect of the present invention, the following chemical formula (1) shows a polymer where pyrimidine is coordinated to a helical-polyacetylene. Pyrimidine is an aromatic molecule where two pairs of carbon-hydrogen groups of benzene are replaced by two nitrogen atoms at the meta-positions to each other. As structural isomers of pyrimidine, when one nitrogen atom is positioned at the ortho-position with respect to the other nitrogen atom, the isomer is called pyridazine, and when positioned at the para-position, the isomer called pyrazine. According to aspects of the present invention, pyridazine and pyrazine are not objects, and pyrimidine is used as the side chain, and the carbon atom lying between two nitrogen atoms at the meta-positions to each other binds to the main chain. This helical-polyacetylene has high stiffness. In this case, no hydrogen protruding to the outside of the ring binds to the two nitrogen atoms. Consequently, repulsion does not occur between the nitrogen and the hydrogen directly binding to a carbon atom of the main chain.
The results of investigation on stability of this polymer based on simulation are shown below.
It is confirmed from
In the case using pyrimidine as the side chain of a helical-polyacetylene, the effect of the binding site of the pyrimidine on stiffness was investigated.
The structures shown in
Throughout the specification, the term “dihedral angle” refers to the same definition as the “dihedral angle” generally used for designating atomic coordinates in, for example, molecular orbital calculation. The “dihedral angle” is described with reference to
In the atoms of the pyrimidine ring shown in
Comparison of
As described above, the structural stability when the side chains of a helical-polyacetylene is benzene differs from that when the side chains of a helical-polyacetylene is pyrimidine, and also the structural stability of a helical-polyacetylene varies depending on the binding site of the pyrimidine. The results of investigation on why such differences occur are shown below.
Here, the term “change in dihedral angle” refers to that the benzene or the pyrimidine is virtually rotated with respect to the main chain using C(2)-C(5) as the rotation axis, while fixing the inner structure of each region of these molecular models and without changing the bond length between C(2) and C(5).
On the other hand, in the pyrimidine side chain shown in
In the cases where the pyrimidine ring binds to the main chain as shown in
As described above, it can be understood that the stiffness is increased in a helical-polyacetylene having pyrimidine side chains arranged as shown in
In application of a polyacetylene to molecular electronic devices, functional groups having useful functions are generally introduced to the side chain. Accordingly, in order to introduce such functional groups, R1, R2, and R3, can be introduced to the pyrimidine ring as shown in the following chemical formula (2).
Examples of the substituents R1, R2, and R3 include alkyl chains, aromatic rings, and functional groups binding through an ester bond or an amide bond according to the purposes of devices, and a predetermined functional group according to a predetermined function may be coordinated. In the substituents R1, R2, and R3, the position of substituent R2 is a position extending toward outside of the helical axis and is generally the most useful position. Accordingly, according to aspects of the present invention, the atom (X in the chemical formula (2)) binding to R2 in the ring, that is, the atom (X) at the position most distant from the atom (C1) binding to the main chain in the six-membered ring is carbon.
Here, in the six-membered ring according to aspects of the present invention, the atom at the position most distant from any atom is defined as follows. In the following chemical formula (3), when six atoms A(1)-A(2)-A(3)-A(4)-A(5)-A(6)-A(1) (the atoms at the left end and the right end are the same) of the six-membered ring are arranged in a ring form, A(2) and A(6) directly bind to A(1) and are each defined as lying at a distance of 1 from A(1). A(3) is distant from A(1) by two bonds in total with A(2) therebetween and is defined as lying at a distance of 2 from A(1). Similarly, A(5) is distant from A(1) by two bonds with A(6) therebetween and is defined as lying at a distance of 2 from A(1). A(4) is distant from A(1) by three bonds with A(2) and A(3) or A(6) and A(5) therebetween and is defined as lying at a distance of 3 from A(1). In the definition described above, when in a ring, the distance from an atom in the clockwise direction and the distance from the atom in the counterclockwise direction are different from each other, the smaller distance is employed. For example, the distance of A(3) from A(1) is 2 having A(2) therebetween and is also 4 having A(6), A(5), and A(4) therebetween, and the smaller distance, 2, is employed.
According to aspects of the present invention, in a six-membered ring, the atom having a largest distance from any atom when defined as in above is defined as the most distant atom. For example, the atom most distant from A(1) is A(4), and the atom most distant from A(2) is A(5). Even if a six-membered ring actually shows thermal motion or causes a difference in actual bond length by binding of a heterogeneous atom, the most distant position is determined as described above by considering only the number of bonds directly binding to each other, without considering the physical distance and the direct distance (shortest distance).
In the above, a polymer having a pyrimidine ring as the side chain binding to a helical-polyacetylene has been described, but similar good structural stability is expected to be given also in a condensed aromatic ring where another aromatic ring is coordinated to the pyrimidine ring. Examples of a polymer having a structure in which a condensed aromatic ring is coordinated as a side chain instead of benzene are shown as the chemical formulae (4) and (5), wherein the condensed aromatic ring is naphthalene or pyrene of which carbon-hydrogen groups adjacent to the carbon binding to the main chain are replaced by nitrogen atoms. In these cases, the atom in the six-membered ring at the position most distant from the atom directly binding to the main chain is carbon.
In the above-mentioned examples, since the side chain does not have protrusion of a hydrogen atom at the site near the main chain, as in that shown in
An example of using a five-membered ring instead of the six-membered ring as the side chain of a helical-polyacetylene is shown below. Here, the following chemical formula (6) shows an example of a polymer where a thiazole ring, which is a five-membered ring, binds as a side chain to a helical-polyacetylene. The five-membered ring is coordinated in such a manner that the both sides of the atom in the five-membered ring directly binding to the main chain are a nitrogen atom and a sulfur atom, and no hydrogen atom protruding to the outside of the ring binds to these two atoms, as in the case shown by the chemical formula (1). Consequently, it is expected that the thiazole rings tend to well stack in the helical axis direction to give high stiffness.
In order to investigate the stiffness, molecular dynamics simulation (300 K, 200 psec) is performed as in the above-described case. The structures before and after the molecular dynamics simulation are shown in
In also a polymer having oxazole represented by the following chemical formula (7) as the side chain instead of thiazole, as shown in
When these polymers are used as materials for molecular electronic devices, various substituents may be introduced to the outside of the five-membered ring. In such a case, substituents R1 and R2 are introduced to the five-membered ring as shown in the following chemical formula (8).
In the chemical formula (8), S (sulfur) may be replaced by O (oxygen).
The substituents R1 and R2 can bind to the five-membered ring only when at least one of X1 and X2 in the chemical formula (8) is carbon. That is, the binding of substituents R1 and R2 is possible when at least one of the atoms (X1 and X2) at the position most distant from the atom (C1) binding to the main chain in the five-membered ring is carbon.
Here, the atom at the position most distant from any atom in a five-membered ring according to aspects of the present invention is defined as follows. In the following chemical formula (9), when five atoms B(1)-B(2)-B(3)-B(4)-B(5)-B(1) (the atoms at the left end and the right end are the same) of the five-membered ring are arranged in a ring form, B(2) and B(5) directly bind to B(1) and are each defined as lying at a distance of 1 from B(1). B(3) is distant from B(1) by two bonds in total with B(2) therebetween and is defined as lying at a distance of 2 from B(1). Similarly, B(4) is distant from B(1) by two bonds with B(5) therebetween and is defined as lying at a distance of 2 from B(1). In the definition described above, when in a ring, the distance from an atom in the clockwise direction and the distance from the atom in the counterclockwise direction are different from each other, the smaller distance is employed. For example, the distance of B(3) from B(1) is 2 having B(2) therebetween and is also 3 having B(5) and B(4) therebetween, and the smaller distance, 2, is employed. According to aspects of the present invention, in also the five-membered ring, the atom having a largest distance from any atom is defined as the most distant atom, as in the six-membered ring. For example, B(3) and B(4) are the atoms most distant from B(1), and B(4) and B(5) are the atoms most distant from B(2). Even if a five-membered ring actually shows thermal motion or causes a difference in actual bond length by binding of a heterogeneous atom, the most distant position is determined as described above by considering only the number of bonds directly binding to each other, without considering the physical distance and the direct distance (shortest distance).
Examples of a polymer expected to have a similar effect include helical-polyacetylenes having side chains represented by the following formulae (10) to (12).
In these chemical formulae, in the atoms constituting the five-membered ring, both atoms on both sides of the atom binding to the main chain are nitrogen, and no hydrogen protruding to the outside of the five-membered ring binds to these two nitrogen atoms. Examples of the substituents R1 and R2 include alkyl chains, aromatic rings, and functional groups binding through an ester bond or an amide bond according to the purpose of devices, and a predetermined functional group according to a predetermined function may be coordinated.
The side chain may be a condensed aromatic ring where another aromatic ring is coordinated to a five-membered ring as represented by the following chemical formula (13). In also this case, in the five-membered ring, the two atoms located most distant from the atom directly binding to the main chain are carbon.
The helical-polyacetylene according to an aspect of the present invention may be produced by any method without particular limitation. For example, the helical-polyacetylene can be prepared by polymerizing substituted acetylene in a solvent using a stereospecific polymerization catalyst for the substituted acetylene, for example, a transition metal complex such as rhodium.
The solvent may be any solvent that can dissolve the substituted acetylene, and examples thereof include organic solvents such as chloroform and toluene.
The stereospecific polymerization catalyst for the substituted acetylene is not particularly limited, and examples thereof include complexes where a circular diolefin compound is coordinated to monovalent rhodium. More specific examples thereof include rhodium(norbornadiene) complexes and rhodium(cyclooctanediene) complexes.
In the helical-polyacetylene according to aspects of the present invention, in the atoms constituting a five- or six-membered ring side chain, two atoms binding to the atom directly binding to a carbon atom of the main chain bind to only the atoms constituting the five- or six-membered ring side chain, and, therefore, no atom such as hydrogen protruding to the outside of the ring binds to these two atoms. Consequently, repulsion against the hydrogen atoms directly binding to the carbon atoms constituting the polyacetylene skeleton of the main chain does not occur, and the C═C double bond of the main chain and the five- or six-membered ring take approximately planar structures, resulting in stabilization of the helical-polyacetylene. As a result, the five- or six-membered rings are satisfactorily stacked in the direction of the helical axis of the polyacetylene to increase the stiffness of the helical-polyacetylene.
In the helical-polyacetylene according to aspects of the present invention, when the aromatic ring is a six-membered ring, it is possible to introduce a functional group having a function to the six-membered ring at the opposite side to the main chain by arranging a carbon atom at the position most distant from the atom directly binding to a carbon atom of the main chain. Similarly, when the aromatic ring is a five-membered ring, it is possible to introduce a functional group having a function to the five-membered ring at the opposite side to the main chain by arranging a carbon atom at least one of the two positions most distant from the atom directly binding to a carbon atom of the main chain.
A device using a helical-polyacetylene will now be described. The helical-polyacetylenes described above have high stiffness and thereby have high conductivity. This will now be shown using theoretical calculation. Note that the analytical method used here is not a specific one but a general one.
A factor influencing on conductivity is transfer integral, which is a useful parameter. Here, the transfer integral used according to aspects of the present invention and its calculation method are briefly described. The transfer integral is calculated by <(φ1|H|φ2>.
H is Hamiltonian of the system. The wave functions φ1 and φ2 are, respectively, the target molecular orbital of a first molecule and the target molecular orbital of a second molecule. Here, one site is π orbital formed by one C═C (actually, an ethylene-type molecule), and since holes are defined as a carrier, the wave functions φ1 and φ2 are each a highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) of an ethylene molecule. These are determined by first-principles quantum-chemical calculations.
As actual software, according to aspects of the present invention, Gaussian (B3LYP/6-31+G(d)) available from Gaussian Inc. is used. The wave functions φ1 and φ2 are each superposition of atomic orbitals (bases) ψa and ψb and are expressed as follows:
φ1=ΣaC1aψa
and
φ2=ΣbC2bψb
wherein the coefficients C1a and C2b and the Fock matrix element <ψa|H|ψb> can be obtained as outputs of Gaussian.
Here, H is Hamiltonian of the system including the molecules generating target two orbitals. Accordingly, the transfer integral can be calculated by Σa Σb C1aC2b<ψa|H|ψb>. Generally speaking, values of transfer integral are negative. Their absolute values are shown hereinafter.
By determining the coordinate of an atom, the predetermined transfer integral can be directly calculated using quantum-chemical calculations at each time. However, in calculations of a huge number of transfer integrals, the transfer integrals can be also empirically obtained by, for example, calculating the transfer integrals in typical cases and constructing an empirical equation using the distance between the centers of C═C bonds of ethylenes and the angles between the normal lines of planes of the ethylenes as parameters. Regarding angular dependence, a literature, J. C. Slater and G. F. Koster., Phys. Rev., 94, 1498 (1954), is helpful.
The values of the above-defined transfer integrals are investigated for trans-polyacetylene (trans-transoid) and helical-polyacetylene (cis-cisoid).
Here, a polyacetylene not having side chains is shown as an example. The first, second, and third neighboring terms each express the arrangement in the main chain: —C═C—C═C—C═C—C═C— by the number of C═C. In the trans type shown in
On the other hand, in the helical type shown in
The calculation of electric conductivity will now be described.
The literature, H. Ishii, N. Kobayashi, and K. Hirose, Phys. Rev., B 76, 205432 (2007), theoretically describes electric conductivity of a carbon material.
This literature shows the analytical results for electric conduction of carbon nanotube (CNT) by a time-dependent wave-packet method. This time-dependent wave-packet method gives a physical quantity such as diffusion coefficient by solving a time-dependent Schroedinger equation for Hamiltonian based on quantum mechanics using an initial wave packet in a system having a size of several micrometers and calculating time evolution of the wave packet. In addition to CNT, it is possible to investigate electric conduction characteristics reflecting the structure of a helical-polyacetylene of a large size such that the main chain contains hundreds of thousands of C═C.
According to aspects of the present invention, it is shown using this technique that the above-described stiff helical-polyacetylene has high electric conductivity. The molecular dynamics simulation shown in
Here, for comparison,
This POOPA is described in Example of Japanese Patent Laid-Open No. 2008-084980.
The horizontal axis of each of
Specifically, after molecular dynamics simulation at a temperature of 300 K for 200 psec, transfer integrals are calculated from each atomic coordinate for 10 fsec each, 100 times, that is, transfer integrals for 1000 fsec are plotted for each site. The results reveal the range of variation of the transfer integrals.
In the case of a POOPA shown
The energy region as the target for analysis of diffusion coefficient in this time is the energy region when holes are injected to a helical-polyacetylene. Here, a method for determining an energy region is described. The method for determining an energy region as a target to be calculated is a known method.
μ=∫x|ψ(x)|2dx,
Δ2=∫(x−μ)2|ψ(x)|2dx.
In
The density of states is calculated by the same method (recursion method) as that described in the above-mentioned literature of Ishii, et al. Based on the results thereof, the energy region for investigating diffusion coefficients is determined to a range of 0.4 to 2.6 eV. The base of a peak of density of states extending to a range of higher than 2.6 eV is due to an energy width of 0.05 eV used in the recursion method as the energy resolution of the density of states. Here, the same value as that in the literature of Ishii, et al. is used.
In detail,
Here, the diffusion coefficient is a ratio of increase in width of a wave packet estimated for each energy level when the wave packet is placed at time 0 at any site. In general, the diffusion coefficient is a constant value in a diffusive transport regime, and the value agrees with a diffusion coefficient usually used. The calculations shown in
It is known that in the case of repeating transfer integral, merely repetition using the same phase may cause artificial rapid diffusion. Accordingly, information not including abnormal diffusion can be obtained by repeating transfer integral while changing the phase in assignment of transfer integral. As described above, the diffusion coefficient is determined in an energy region of 0.4 to 2.6 eV.
In the known POOPA shown in
According to Einstein's relation, mobility and diffusion coefficient are proportional to each other when the temperature is constant. That is, it has been shown by simulation that the mobility of the HPA is also ten times larger than that of the known polyacetylene.
In the description of
Here, a calculation example for a known POOPA is shown as an example.
In order to investigate effects of transfer integrals between the second and third neighboring sites, specifically, changes in diffusion coefficient are investigated when a part of transfer integrals between the first, second, and third neighboring sites are set to 0.
wherein k represents Boltzmann's constant, T represents the absolute temperature, and e represents quantum of electricity.
In this example, a known POOPA has been investigated as an object. The pyrimidine side chain HPA also has a similar helical structure. Consequently, the second and the third neighboring terms of transfer integral are large, and localization is prevented.
As Example 1 of the present invention, a stiff helical-polyacetylene having a six-membered ring side chain is described. Here, a method of producing poly(2-ethynylpyrimidine) is described.
2-Ethynylpyrimidine is produced from 2-bromopyrimidine (CAS No. 4595-60-2) by a known method (reference: E. T. Sabourin, J. Org. Chem., Vol. 48, No. 25, 1983).
Twenty-three milligrams of a rhodium(norbornadiene) chloride dimer, 8 mL of chloroform, and 0.1 mL of triethylamine are put in a test tube hermetically sealed after pressure reduction and nitrogen substitution and are stirred at 30° C. for 15 min. Subsequently, a solution of 0.52 g of 2-ethynylpyrimidine in 2 mL of chloroform is poured into the mixture to start polymerization. The reaction is performed at 30° C. for 1 hour, and the resulting polymer after sufficient progress of polymerization is washed with methanol and subjected to filtration and vacuum drying for 24 hours to obtain the target poly(2-ethynylpyrimidine) represented by the chemical formula (1).
The thus-produced poly(2-ethynylpyrimidine) is a helical-polyacetylene having high stiffness.
As Example 2 of the present invention, a stiff helical-polyacetylene having a five-membered ring side chain is described. As an example, a method of producing a helical-polyacetylene having thiazole as the side chain represented by the chemical formula (6) is described.
The target poly(2-bromothiazole) can be produced by the same procedure as in Example 1 using 2-bromothiazole (CAS No. 3034-53-5) instead of 2-bromopyrimidine in Example 1.
The thus-produced poly(2-bromothiazole) is a helical-polyacetylene having high stiffness.
As Example 3 of the present invention, a device using a stiff helical-polyacetylene having a six-membered ring side chain is described. Here, a device using poly(2-ethynylpyrimidine) and a method of producing the device are described.
This Example shows a field-effect transistor device having a gate electrode, and a control electrode is not necessary by using the stiff helical-polyacetylene as a lead. However, the device may include a control electrode.
In this Example, a voltage is applied between electrodes that are in contact with poly(2-ethynylpyrimidine) for allowing a current to flow in the poly(2-ethynylpyrimidine). In addition to this, aspects of the present invention can also be used as a device for transporting electrons, holes, or charge of electrons or holes generated in poly(2-ethynylpyrimidine), more generally, in a helical-polyacetylene to an electrode side. Examples of specific application include solar cells, photosensors, and gas sensors.
Furthermore, even if a charge is not directly transferred between an electrode and a helical-polyacetylene, it is possible to operate a device as a sensor by providing an insulating region between the electrode and the helical-polyacetylene so that a voltage of the electrode affects the helical-polyacetylene or detecting a voltage generated in the helical-polyacetylene with the electrode.
The helical-polyacetylene according to aspects of the present invention has high stiffness and can be therefore used in, for example, organic electronic devices such as transistors, light-emitting devices, and light-receiving devices using organic materials.
While the present invention has been described with reference to exemplary embodiments, it is to be understood that the invention is not limited to the disclosed exemplary embodiments. The scope of the following claims is to be accorded the broadest interpretation so as to encompass all such modifications and equivalent structures and functions.
This application claims the benefit of Japanese Patent Application No. 2011-041739 filed Feb. 28, 2011, which is hereby incorporated by reference herein in its entirety.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
---|---|---|---|
2011-041739 | Feb 2011 | JP | national |