Synthesis 2021; 53(03): 461-474
DOI: 10.1055/s-0040-1707316
short review

Synthesis and Crystal Engineering of Rubrene and Its Derivatives

,
Emma C. Murphy
,


Abstract

Rubrene (5,6,11,12-tetraphenyltetracene) is a polyacene material that has been well studied throughout its nearly one-hundred year history. Originally found fascinating for its luminescent properties, it has emerged at the forefront for organic electronics due to its particularly high charge carrier mobility for an organic crystal. Despite great interest and its explosion in the literature over the past two decades, the commercial synthesis of rubrene has remained relatively unchanged since its initial discovery in 1926. Several recent studies have reported alternate routes to the rubrene structure with substitutions on the peripheral­ aromatic rings and tetracene core. Substituting in this manner has the potential to improve upon rubrene’s electronic properties. We review the various routes to rubrene and its derivatives and provide a brief overview of the solid-state library available for study. The information gained by comparing the solid-state properties between derivatives offers insight into unpredictable crystallization and polymorphism – complicated issues – which have hindered research into materials applications­ of rubrene. We hope that these insights inspire work in application­-driven synthetic chemistry for future rubrene derivatives.

1 Introduction

2 Synthesis

2.1 Traditional Rubrene Synthesis

2.1.1 Recent Applications

2.2 Multi-Step Synthesis

2.2.1 Historical Routes

2.2.2 Diels–Alder Approaches

2.2.3 Cross-Coupling Approaches

2.2.4 Comparative Synthesis of Perfluororubrene

3 Crystal Engineering

4 Conclusions and Outlook



Publikationsverlauf

Eingereicht: 03. August 2020

Angenommen: 08. September 2020

Artikel online veröffentlicht:
28. Oktober 2020

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