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Pyrazinacenes are next generation N-heteroacenes and represent a novel class of stable n-type materials capable of accepting more than one electron and displaying intriguing features, including prototropism, halochromism, and redox chromism. Astonishingly, despite a century since their discovery, there have been no reports on the conjugated polymers of pyrazinacenes due to unknown substrate scope and lack of pyrazinacene monomers that are conducive to condensation polymerization. Breaking through these challenges, in this work, we report the synthesis of previously undiscovered and highly coveted conjugated polymers of pyrazinacenes. In order to understand the intricacies of conjugation extension within the acene and along the polymer backbone, a series of electronically diverse four pyrazinacene conjugated polymers were synthesized. Polymers synthesis required optimizing a few synthetic steps along the 12-step synthetic pathway. The generated pyrazinacene monomers are not amenable to the popular condensation polymerizations involving Pd or Cu catalysts. Gratifyingly, Pd and Cu free dehydrohalogenation polymerization of the monomer with HgCl2 resulted in high molecular weight organometallic conjugated pyrazinacene polymers within a few minutes at room temperature. The dual role played by the Hg(II) during the polymerization, combined with the self-coupling of the RHgCl (intermediate), is at the core of successful polymerization. Notably, the self-coupling of intermediates challenges the strict stoichiometric balance typically required for step-growth polymerization and offers a novel synthetic strategy to generate high molecular weight conjugated polymers even with imbalanced monomer stoichiometries. A combination of electrochemical studies and DFT-B3LYP simulations indicated that the presence of the reduced pyrazine ring promotes interacene p-conjugation through the metal center, in contrast to completely oxidized tetrazaazaanthracene. The extension of conjugation results in ca. 2 eV lower reduction potential for polymers compared to the monomer, placing the LUMO energy levels of these polymers on par with some of the best-known n-type polymers. Also, the presence of NH protons in the pyrazinacene polymers show ionochromism and red-shift UV-vis absorption maximum by ca. 100 nm. This work not only shows a way to realize highly desirable and elusive pyrazinacene conjugated polymers but also paves the way for a library of n-type conjugated polymers that can undergo multi-electron reduction.more » « less
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null (Ed.)Understanding the structural parameters that determine the extension of π-conjugation in 2-dimensions is key for controlling the optical, photophysical, and electronic properties of 2D-π-conjugated materials. In this article, three non-slanted H-mers including a donor–acceptor H-mer (H-mer-3) with an increase in dihedral angle (twist) between the strands and rungs are synthesized and studied. These non-slanted H-mers represent the repeat units of 2D-π-conjugated materials. H-mer-3, containing donor-strands and an acceptor-rung, is an unexplored donor–acceptor architecture in both slanted and non-slanted H-mers. The H-mers displayed both acid and base dependent optical properties. While the rungs have a little impact on the H-mer absorption spectra they play a key role in the emission and fluorescence lifetime. H-mer-3 ( i.e. , donor–acceptor H-mer) shows a higher Stokes shift and fluorescence lifetime than the other two H-mers. The twist and the presence of an electron deficient rung in H-mer-3 facilitated an intramolecular charge transfer in the excited state from the strands to the electron deficient rung, and therefore control over the H-mer emission properties. The lack of insulating pendant chains, reduced π–π interactions in thinfilms, and longer fluorescence lifetimes make these H-mers interesting candidates for various electronic and optoelectronic applications.more » « less