Phenacene
Phenacenes are a class of organic compounds consisting of fused aromatic rings. They are polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons, related to acenes and helicenes from which they differ by the arrangement of the fused rings.
| Phenacene | Common name | Molecular formula | Structural formula |
| Phenacene | Phenanthrene | ||
| Phenacene | Chrysene | ||
| Phenacene | Picene | ||
| Phenacene | Fulminene | ||
| Phenacene |
Relevance to organic electronic materials
Aromatic compounds with extended π-conjugated system have attracted attention because of their potential use in organic electronics as organic semiconductors.Of academic interest, pentacene has been widely used as an active layer in organic thin-film field-effect transistors. The main drawback of pentacene OFET is degradation upon exposure to light and air. On the other hand, phenacenes, an isomeric form of acenes, has been known as a stable compound in which the benzene rings are fused in a zigzag structure. For the past several years, there is renewed interest in synthesis of phenacene derivatives associated with electronic applications in emissive and semi- or superconducting materials.
Picene can serve as an active layer of a high-performance p-channel organic thin-film FET with very high field-effect mobility μ = 5 cm2/. Phenacene FET shows μ = 0.75 cm2/ and no sensitivity to air. Furthermore, picene doped with potassium and rubidium exhibit superconductivity with a maximum critical temperature TC ≈ 18 K. Thus, phenacenes and their derivatives may play an important role in future fabrication of stable and high-performance electronic devices such as OFET, OLED and organic solar cells. Substituted picenes may serve as an active layer of OFETs.