47,148 research outputs found
Diquat Derivatives: Highly Active, Two-Dimensional Nonlinear Optical Chromophores with Potential Redox Switchability
In this article, we present a detailed study of structure−activity relationships in diquaternized 2,2′-bipyridyl (diquat) derivatives. Sixteen new chromophores have been synthesized, with variations in the amino electron donor substituents, π-conjugated bridge, and alkyl diquaternizing unit. Our aim is to combine very large, two-dimensional (2D) quadratic nonlinear optical (NLO) responses with reversible redox chemistry. The chromophores have been characterized as their PF_6^− salts by using various techniques including electronic absorption spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry. Their visible absorption spectra are dominated by intense π → π^* intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) bands, and all show two reversible diquat-based reductions. First hyperpolarizabilities β have been measured by using hyper-Rayleigh scattering with an 800 nm laser, and Stark spectroscopy of the ICT bands affords estimated static first hyperpolarizabilities β_0. The directly and indirectly derived β values are large and increase with the extent of π-conjugation and electron donor strength. Extending the quaternizing alkyl linkage always increases the ICT energy and decreases the E_(1/2) values for diquat reduction, but a compensating increase in the ICT intensity prevents significant decreases in Stark-based β_0 responses. Nine single-crystal X-ray structures have also been obtained. Time-dependent density functional theory clarifies the molecular electronic/optical properties, and finite field calculations agree with polarized HRS data in that the NLO responses of the disubstituted species are dominated by ‘off-diagonal’ β_(zyy) components. The most significant findings of these studies are: (i) β_0 values as much as 6 times that of the chromophore in the technologically important material (E)-4′-(dimethylamino)-N-methyl-4-stilbazolium tosylate; (ii) reversible electrochemistry that offers potential for redox-switching of optical properties over multiple states; (iii) strongly 2D NLO responses that may be exploited for novel practical applications; (iv) a new polar material, suitable for bulk NLO behavior
Higher-order triplet interaction in energy-level modeling of excited-state absorption for an expanded porphyrin cadmium complex
Recent measurements of transmission versus fluence for a methanol-solvated asymmetric pentaazadentate porphyrin-like (APPC) cadmium complex, [(C6H4-APPC)Cd]Cl, showed the limitations of current energy-level models in predicting the transmission behavior of organic reverse saturable absorbers at fluences greater than 1 J/cm². A new model has been developed that incorporates higher-order triplet processes and accurately fits both nanosecond and picosecond transmission-versus-fluence data. This model has provided the first known determination of a higher triplet excited-state absorption cross section and lifetime for an APPC complex and also described a previously unreported feature in the transmission-versus-fluence data. The intersystem crossing rate and the previously neglected higher triplet excited-state absorption cross section are shown to govern the excited-state population dynamics of methanol-solvated [(C6H4-APPC)Cd]Cl most strongly at more-practical device energies
Steric engineering of metal-halide perovskites with tunable optical band gaps
Owing to their high energy-conversion efficiency and inexpensive fabrication
routes, solar cells based on metal-organic halide perovskites have rapidly
gained prominence as a disruptive technology. An attractive feature of
perovskite absorbers is the possibility of tailoring their properties by
changing the elemental composition through the chemical precursors. In this
context, rational in silico design represents a powerful tool for mapping the
vast materials landscape and accelerating discovery. Here we show that the
optical band gap of metal-halide perovskites, a key design parameter for solar
cells, strongly correlates with a simple structural feature, the largest
metal-halide-metal bond angle. Using this descriptor we suggest continuous
tunability of the optical gap from the mid-infrared to the visible. Precise
band gap engineering is achieved by controlling the bond angles through the
steric size of the molecular cation. Based on these design principles we
predict novel low-gap perovskites for optimum photovoltaic efficiency, and we
demonstrate the concept of band gap modulation by synthesising and
characterising novel mixed-cation perovskites.Comment: This manuscript was submitted for publication on March 6th, 2014.
Many of the results presented in this manuscript were presented at the
International Conference on Solution processed Semiconductor Solar Cells,
held in Oxford, UK, on 10-12 September 2014. The manuscript is 37 pages long
and contains 8 figure
Optical absorption and electrical conductivity of electron acceptor doped poly-3-octylthiophene films
Optical absorption and electrical conductivity measurements of solution-doped poly-3-octylthiophene (P3OT) films were studied. Chloroform solutions of P3OT were doped with the organic electron-acceptors, 2,3-dichloro-5,6-dicyano-l,4-benzoquinone (DDQ) and 7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane (TCNQ); and with the inorganic electron acceptor, ferric chloride (FeCl{dollar}\sb3{dollar}). Charge transfer was observed in P3OT solutions doped with FeCl{dollar}\sb3{dollar} and DDQ. TCNQ-doped solutions showed no optical evidence of charge transfer. Thin films of the doped P3OT were examined at various doping levels. Spectroscopic and electrical conductivity measurements of P3OT films, doped with DDQ, TCNQ, and FeCl{dollar}\sb3{dollar}, at different doping levels, are presented. Optical absorption measurements provided information on the degree of charge transfer occurring for the various dopants. Electrical conductivity measurements showed that the conductivity of P3OT increased with the various dopants in the order of TCNQ {dollar}\u3c{dollar} DDQ {dollar}\u3c{dollar} FeCl{dollar}\sb3{dollar}, for the same dopant concentration level. Results are discussed in relation to the electrochemical properties of the prepared films and the structural properties of P3OT
Enhancement of perovskite solar cells by plasmonic nanoparticles
Synthetic perovskites with photovoltaic properties open a new era in solar
photovoltaics. Due to high optical absorption perovskite-based thin-film solar
cells are usually considered as fully absorbing solar radiation on condition of
ideal blooming. However, is it really so? The analysis of the literature data
has shown that the absorbance of all photovoltaic pervoskites has the spectral
hole at infrared frequencies where the solar radiation spectrum has a small
local peak. This absorption dip results in the decrease of the optical
efficiency of thin-film pervoskite solar cells by nearly 3% and close the ways
of utilise them at this range for any other applications. In our work we show
that to cure this shortage is possible complementing the basic structure by an
inexpensive plasmonic array.Comment: 6 pages 6 picture
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