RATIONAL DESIGN AND SYNTHESIS OF DISCOTIC LIQUID CRYSTALS FOR ORGANIC ELECTRONICS APPLICATIONS
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Abstract
Organic semiconductors (OSCs) have gained tremendous attention in both industries and
academia, with potential emerging applications in molecular electronics to solve the increasing
global energy crisis. The main challenge is finding organic compounds that can form defect
free uniform thin films. In this regard, discotic liquid crystals (DLCs) composed of a central π
conjugated rigid aromatic core and flexible alkyl chains at the periphery ease the fabrication
procedure by solution processing method.1 Better-performing OSCs necessitate optimized
essential parameters such as high charge (hole or electron) mobility, electronic structure,
solution processability, and thermal stability.
The objective of the Ph.D. thesis is to rationally design, synthesize, and characterize room
temperature DLC materials that exhibit favorable self-organization, imparting increased
molecular stacking for efficient charge transport. Several known DLCs have electron-rich
cores, but few electron-deficient systems have been found. In this regard, an electron-deficient
DLC has been rationally designed and synthesized using a tris(triazole) nitrogen-rich core,
demonstrating fast electron transport.2 DLCs for hole-transporting materials have also been
developed and showed increased hole mobility with increasing temperature, which can
potentially be applied in nonlinear organic electronics.3 Through meticulous design strategy
selection, columnar self-assembly and luminescence can be combined to significantly aid in
developing new DLC-based emitters for organic light emitting diode (OLED) applications. The
luminescent columnar perylene tetraester-based DLCs were developed to fabricate as emitters
in solution-processable OLEDs.4 The columnar and nematic phases have been investigated as
viable candidates for deep-blue emissive layers in OLEDs, leading to low driving voltage and
improved device efficiencies