3 research outputs found
Chain Length and Substituent Effects on the Formation of Excimer-Like States in Nanoaggregates of CN-PPV Model Oligomers
The effects of aggregate formation on the photophysical properties of alkoxy and cyano-substituted polyphenylene phenylene vinylene oligomers (CN-PPVs) were studied in bulk solution to better understand the consequences of aggregation for the emission properties of the polymer. Nanoaggregates of oligomers from 5 to 13 repeat units in length were formed using a solvent reprecipitation method. The propensity for these aggregates to exhibit excimer-like emission in solution was found to be a strong function of oligomer chain length and the solvents used in the reprecipitation process. Short-chain oligomers produced nanoaggregates with absorption and fluorescence spectra and emission lifetimes essentially identical to those of the monomer. The aggregates of long-chain oligomers have broad and red-shifted emission spectra and relatively long emission lifetimes, both of which are characteristic of excimer states. However their absorption spectra are also perturbed suggesting that the oligomer chains in these aggregates interact strongly in their electronic ground states as well. For intermediate chain lengths, dual monomer-like (green) and excimer-like (red) emission is observed. Single aggregate dispersed emission spectra from aggregates deposited onto glass coverslips demonstrate that, in the absence of solvent, the predominant emitters are monomer-like rather than excimer-like. Moreover, the monomer-like emitters are found to be far more photostable than the analogous non-CN substituted aggregates, whereas the photostability of the excimer-like emitters is exceptionally poor under the illumination conditions used for microscopy. Comparisons between the properties of these nanoaggregates and the corresponding CN-substituted polymer are drawn
Effects of Solvent Properties on the Spectroscopy and Dynamics of Alkoxy-Substituted PPV Oligomer Aggregates
Conjugated systems are frequently studied in their nanoaggregate
form to probe the effects of solvent and of film formation on their
spectral and dynamical properties. This article focuses on the emission
spectra and dynamics of nanoaggregates of alkoxy-substituted PPV oligomers
with the goal of interpreting the vibronic emission envelopes observed
in these systems (<i>J. Phys. Chem. C</i> <b>2009</b>, <i>113</i>, 18851–18862). The aggregates are formed
by adding a nonsolvent such as methanol (MeOH) or water to a solution
of the oligomers in a good solvent such as methyl tetrahydrofuran
(MeTHF) or tetrahydrofuran (THF). The emission spectra of aggregates
formed using either of these combinations exhibit a vibronic pattern
in which the ratio of the intensity of highest-energy band to that
of the lower energy peaks depends strongly on the ratio of good to
poor solvent. In aggregates formed from MeTHF:MeOH, this was shown
to be due to the presence of both aggregate-like and monomer-like
emitters forming a “core” and surrounding “shell”-like
structure, respectively, within a single aggregate (<i>J. Phys.
Chem. C</i> <b>2011</b>, <i>115</i>, 15607–15616).
In support of this model, the monomer-like emission is shown here
to be significantly decreased by changing the solvent pair to the
more polar THF:water. This suggests that nanoaggregates formed in
THF:water contain a much smaller proportion of monomer-like chains
than those formed in MeTHF/MeOH, as would be expected from using a
more highly polar nonsolvent. Results from bulk steady-state and time-resolved
emission measurements as well as fluorescence lifetime imaging microscopy
(FLIM) of the aggregates are shown to be consistent with this interpretation
The Effects of Side-Chain-Induced Disorder on the Emission Spectra and Quantum Yields of Oligothiophene Nanoaggregates: A Combined Experimental and MD-TDDFT Study
Oligomeric thiophenes are commonly
used components in organic electronics
and solar cells. These molecules stack and/or aggregate readily under
the processing conditions used to form thin films for these applications,
significantly altering their optical and charge-transport properties.
To determine how these effects depend on the substitution pattern
of the thiophene main chains, nanoaggregates of three sexithiophene
oligomers having different alkyl substitution patterns were formed
using solvent-poisoning techniques and studied using steady-state
and time-resolved emission spectroscopy. The results indicate the
substantial role played by the side-chain substituents in determining
the emissive properties of these species. Both the measured spectral
changes and their dependence on substitution are well-modeled by combined
quantum chemistry and molecular dynamics simulations. The simulations
connect the side-chain-induced disorder, which determines the favorable
chain-packing configurations within the aggregates, with their measured
electronic spectra
