163 research outputs found
Continuum model of strong light-matter coupling for molecular polaritons
Strong coupling between light and matter generates hybrid polaritons. We
present a continuum model that describes the polaritons by light and matter
densities of states (DOS) that only depend on the refractive index of the
material. This model is applied to molecular polaritons derived from molecules
with broad spectral absorption. While the photonic DOS has a complex spectral
distribution, the matter DOS is largely unmodified by strong coupling. We argue
that bright states cannot be partitioned from dark states, and instead the
photonic DOS is shared over a vast number of matter states
Recommended from our members
Singlet exciton fission in solution.
Singlet exciton fission, the spin-conserving process that produces two triplet excited states from one photoexcited singlet state, is a means to circumvent the Shockley-Queisser limit in single-junction solar cells. Although the process through which singlet fission occurs is not well characterized, some local order is thought to be necessary for intermolecular coupling. Here, we report a triplet yield of 200% and triplet formation rates approaching the diffusion limit in solutions of bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl (TIPS)) pentacene. We observe a transient bound excimer intermediate, formed by the collision of one photoexcited and one ground-state TIPS-pentacene molecule. The intermediate breaks up when the two triplets separate to each TIPS-pentacene molecule. This efficient system is a model for future singlet-fission materials and for disordered device components that produce cascades of excited states from sunlight.B.J.W. was supported by a Herchel Smith Research Fellowship. A.J.M. received funding
from a Marie Curie Scholarship. D.B. is a FNRS Research Director. Both A.J.M and D.B.
acknowledge support from the European Community’s Initial Training Network SUPERIOR (PITN-GA-2009-238177). Further funding for this project came from the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council (EPSRC) and a pump-prime grant from the Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability.This is the accepted version of an article originally published in Nature Chemistry 5, 1019–1024 and available online at http://www.nature.com/nchem/journal/v5/n12/full/nchem.1801.html. Nature Publishing Group's conditions for reuse are detailed at http://www.nature.com/authors/policies/license.html
Tunable Hydrophobicity in DNA Micelles:Design, Synthesis, and Characterization of a New Family of DNA Amphiphiles
This work describes the synthesis and characterization of a new family of DNA amphiphiles containing modified nucleobases. The hydrophobicity was imparted by the introduction of a dodec-1-yne chain at the 5-position of the uracil base, which allowed precise and simple tuning of the hydrophobic properties through solid-phase DNA synthesis. The micelles formed from these modified DNA sequences were characterized by atomic force microscopy, dynamic light scattering, and polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis. These experiments revealed the role of the quantity and location of the hydrophobic units in determining the morphology and stability of the micelles. The effects of hybridization on the physical characteristics of the DNA micelles were also studied; these results showed potential for the sequence-specific noncovalent functionalization of the self-assembled aggregates
Controlling the Manifold of Polariton States Through Molecular Disorder
Exciton polaritons, arising from the interaction of electronic transitions
with confined electromagnetic fields, have emerged as a powerful tool to
manipulate the properties of organic materials. However, standard experimental
and theoretical approaches overlook the significant energetic disorder present
in most materials now studied. Using the conjugated polymer P3HT as a model
platform, we systematically tune the degree of energetic disorder and observe a
corresponding redistribution of photonic character within the polariton
manifold. Based on these subtle spectral features, we develop a more
generalized approach to describe strong light-matter coupling in disordered
systems that captures the key spectroscopic observables and provides a
description of the rich manifold of states intermediate between bright and
dark. Applied to a wide range of organic systems, our method challenges
prevailing notions about ultrastrong coupling and whether it can be achieved
with broad, disordered absorbers
Annealing-Induced Changes in Double-Brush Langmuir-Blodgett Films of α-Helical Diblock Copolypeptides
The effect of annealing on the structure and the helix orientation in Langmuir-Blodgett (LB) monolayers of diblock copolymers (PLGA-b-PMLGSLGs) of poly(α-L-glutamic acid) (PLGA) and poly(γ-methyl-L-glutamate-ran-γ-stearyl-L-glutamate) with 30 mol % of stearyl substituents (PMLGSLG) with unidirectional helix orientation deposited on hydrophilic silicon substrates was characterized by means of small-angle X-ray reflectivity, transmission Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, and atomic force microscopy. Upon annealing at 100 °C for 24 h, the α-helices became less tilted toward the substrate surface normal. Surface area shrinkage accompanied the change in tilt, indicated by an increase in both film thickness and electron density, resulting in more compact and uniform films. The enhancement of the helix orientation by thermal annealing was greater for the PMLGSLG block and for the diblock copolymers with the shorter block lengths. For these diblock copolymers, annealing resulted in postorientation of the PMLGSLG block helices almost perpendicular to the substrate surface. This effect originates from a considerable increase in intermolecular packing of the PLGA block caused by hydrogen bonds between the carboxylic groups upon annealing, as well as the high mobility of the PMLGSLG block helices for rearrangement favored by the melted side chain mantle at elevated temperatures.
Efficient Singlet Fission and Triplet-Pair Emission in a Family of Zethrene Diradicaloids.
Singlet fission offers the potential to overcome thermodynamic limits in solar cells by converting the energy of a single absorbed photon into two distinct triplet excitons. However, progress is limited by the small family of suitable materials, and new chromophore design principles are needed. Here, we experimentally vindicate the design concept of diradical stabilization in a tunable family of functionalized zethrenes. All molecules in the series exhibit rapid formation of a bound, spin-entangled triplet-pair state TT. It can be dissociated by thermally activated triplet hopping and exhibits surprisingly strong emission for an optically "dark" state, further enhanced with increasing diradical character. We find that the TT excited-state absorption spectral shape correlates with the binding energy between constituent triplets, providing a new tool to understand this unusual state. Our results reveal a versatile new family of tunable materials with excellent optical and photochemical properties for exploitation in singlet fission devices
Heterogeneous singlet fission in a covalently linked pentacene dimer
Molecular dimers are generally regarded as essential tools for probing structure-property relationships in condensed-phase systems, revealing complexities where structural tuning is challenging. Traditionally treated as “static,” with properties defined by their optimized geometry, we argue that dimers are “dynamic,” exhibiting considerable conformational heterogeneity over time, which significantly influences interchromophore coupling strengths. Illustrating this, we explore the singlet fission dynamics of a pentacene dimer linked by phenyl-diketopyrrolopyrrole and acetylene bridges. The unrestricted rotations yield a myriad of rotational conformers, each altering the singlet fission processes, evident through excitation-energy-dependent transient absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. This necessitates considering not only broad distribution of rate constants but also multidimensional potential-energy surfaces with multiple sub-ensembles, leading to “heterogeneous singlet fission.” Consequently, these findings challenge the prevailing static approach to molecular dimer photophysics, suggesting that individual steps in excited-state relaxation pathways cannot be delineated by unique rate constants and yields
Tensor network simulation of multi-environmental open quantum dynamics via machine learning and entanglement renormalisation
The simulation of open quantum dynamics is a critical tool for understanding how the non-classical properties of matter might be functionalised in future devices. However, unlocking the enormous potential of molecular quantum processes is highly challenging due to the very strong and non-Markovian coupling of ‘environmental’ molecular vibrations to the electronic ‘system’ degrees of freedom. Here, we present an advanced but general computational strategy that allows tensor network methods to effectively compute the non-perturbative, real-time dynamics of exponentially large vibronic wave functions of real molecules. We demonstrate how ab initio modelling, machine learning and entanglement analysis can enable simulations which provide real-time insight and direct visualisation of dissipative photophysics, and illustrate this with an example based on the ultrafast process known as singlet fission
Identification of a triplet pair intermediate in singlet exciton fission in solution.
Singlet exciton fission is the spin-conserving transformation of one spin-singlet exciton into two spin-triplet excitons. This exciton multiplication mechanism offers an attractive route to solar cells that circumvent the single-junction Shockley-Queisser limit. Most theoretical descriptions of singlet fission invoke an intermediate state of a pair of spin-triplet excitons coupled into an overall spin-singlet configuration, but such a state has never been optically observed. In solution, we show that the dynamics of fission are diffusion limited and enable the isolation of an intermediate species. In concentrated solutions of bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl)[TIPS]--tetracene we find rapid (<100 ps) formation of excimers and a slower (∼ 10 ns) break up of the excimer to two triplet exciton-bearing free molecules. These excimers are spectroscopically distinct from singlet and triplet excitons, yet possess both singlet and triplet characteristics, enabling identification as a triplet pair state. We find that this triplet pair state is significantly stabilized relative to free triplet excitons, and that it plays a critical role in the efficient endothermic singlet fission process.H.L.S was supported by the Winton Programme for the Physics of
Sustainability and A.J.M received funding from the Engineering and Physical
Sciences Research Council.This is the accepted manuscript. The final version is available at http://www.pnas.org/content/112/25/7656.abstract
- …