Abstract
Conjugated polyelectrolytes (CPEs) are a rising class of organic mixed ionic-electronic conductors,
with applications in bio-interfacing electronics and energy harvesting and storage devices. Here,
we employ a quantum mechanically informed coarse-grained model coupled with semiclassical rate
theory to generate a first view of semidilute CPE morphologies and their corresponding ionic and
electronic transport properties. We observe that the poor solvent quality of CPE backbones drives
the formation of electrostatically repulsive fibers capable of forming percolating networks at semi-
dilute concentrations. The thickness of the fibers and the degree of network connectivity are found to
strongly influence the electronic mobilities of the morphologies. Calculated structure factors reveal
that fiber formation alters the position and scaling of the inter-chain PE peak relative to good
solvent predictions and induces a narrower distribution of interchain spacings. We also observe that
electrostatic interactions play a significant role in determining CPE morphology, but have only a
small impact on the local site energetics. This work presents a significant step forward in the ability
to predict CPE morphology and ion-electron transport properties, and provides insights into how
morphology influences electronic and ionic transport in conjugated materials.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Materials
Description
Contains detailed descriptions of equilibration procedures, morphological characterization, network analysis, electronic structure calculations, and diffusivity calculations.
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