90 research outputs found
Fast T-Type Photochromism of Colloidal Cu-Doped ZnS Nanocrystals
This paper reports on durable and nearly temperature-independent (at 298–328 K) T-type photochromism of colloidal Cu-doped ZnS nanocrystals (NCs). The color of Cu-doped ZnS NC powder changes from pale yellow to dark gray by UV light irradiation, and the color changes back to pale yellow on a time scale of several tens of seconds to minutes after stopping the light irradiation, while the decoloration reaction is accelerated to submillisecond in solutions. This decoloration reaction is much faster than those of conventional inorganic photochromic materials. The origin of the reversible photoinduced coloration is revealed to be a strong optical transition involving a delocalized surface hole which survives over a minute after escaping from intraparticle carrier recombination due to electron-hopping dissociation. ZnS NCs can be easily prepared in a water-mediated one-pot synthesis and are less toxic. Therefore, they are promising for large-scale photochromic applications such as windows and building materials in addition to conventional photochromic applications. Moreover, the present study demonstrates the importance of excited carrier dynamics and trap depths, resulting in coloration over minutes not only for photochromic nanomaterials but also for various advanced photofunctional materials, such as long persistent luminescent materials and photocatalytic nanomaterials
Biomimetic design of an α-ketoacylphosphonium-based light-activated oxygenation auxiliary
The biomimetic design of a transition metal complex based on the iron(IV)-oxo porphyrin π-cation radical species in cytochrome P450 enzymes has been studied extensively. Herein, we translate the functions of this iron(IV)-oxo porphyrin π-cation radical species to an α-ketoacyl phosphonium species comprised of non-metal atoms and utilize it as a light-activated oxygenation auxiliary for ortho-selective oxygenation of anilines. Visible light irradiation converts the α-ketoacyl phosphonium species to the excited state, which acts as a transiently generated oxidant. The intramolecular nature of the process ensures high regioselectivity and chemoselectivity. The auxiliary is easily removable. A one-pot protocol is also described
Nonfullerene Acceptors Bearing Spiro‐Substituted Bithiophene Units in Organic Solar Cells: Tuning the Frontier Molecular Orbital Distribution to Reduce Exciton Binding Energy
Wang Kai, Jinnai Seihou, Urakami Takumi, et al. Nonfullerene Acceptors Bearing Spiro‐Substituted Bithiophene Units in Organic Solar Cells: Tuning the Frontier Molecular Orbital Distribution to Reduce Exciton Binding Energy. Angewandte Chemie International Edition, e202412691 (2024); https://doi.org/10.1002/anie.202412691.The development of nonfullerene acceptors (NFAs), represented by ITIC, has contributed to improving the power conversion efficiency (PCE) of organic solar cells (OSCs). Although tuning the electronic structures to reduce the exciton binding energy (Eb) is considered to promote photocharge generation, a rational molecular design for NFAs has not been established. In this study, we designed and developed two ITIC-based NFAs bearing spiro-substituted bithiophene or biphenyl units (named SpiroT-DCI and SpiroF-DCI) to tune the frontier molecular orbital (FMO) distribution of NFAs. While the highest occupied molecular orbitals (HOMOs) of SpiroF-DCI and ITIC are delocalized in the main π-conjugated framework, the HOMO of SpiroT-DCI is distributed on the bithiophene unit. Reflecting this difference, SpiroT-DCI exhibits a smaller Eb than either SpiroF-DCI or ITIC, and exhibits greater external quantum efficiency in single-component OSCs. Furthermore, SpiroT-DCI shows improved PCEs for bulk-heterojunction OSCs with a donor of PBDB-T, compared with that of either SpiroT-DCI or ITIC. Time-resolved spectroscopy measurements show that the photo-induced intermolecular charge separation is effective even in pristine SpiroT-DCI films. This study highlights the introduction of spiro-substituted bithiophene units that are effective in tuning the FMOs of ITIC, which is desirable for reducing the Eb and improving the PCE in OSCs
Remarkable Dependence of the Final Charge Separation Efficiency on the Donor–Acceptor Interaction in Photoinduced Electron Transfer
The unprecedented dependence of final charge separation efficiency as a function of donor–acceptor interaction in covalently-linked molecules with a rectilinear rigid oligo-p-xylene bridge has been observed. Optimization of the donor–acceptor electronic coupling remarkably inhibits the undesirable rapid decay of the singlet charge-separated state to the ground state, yielding the final long-lived, triplet charge-separated state with circa 100% efficiency. This finding is extremely useful for the rational design of artificial photosynthesis and organic photovoltaic cells toward efficient solar energy conversion
Geometries and Terahertz Motions Driving Quintet Multiexcitons and Ultimate Triplet-Triplet Dissociations via the Intramolecular Singlet-Fissions
Importance of vibronic effects has been highlighted for the singlet-fission (SF) that convert one high-energy singlet exciton into doubled triplet excitons, as strongly correlated multiexcitons. However, molecular mechanisms of spin conversion processes and ultimate de-couplings in the multiexcitons are poorly understood. We have analyzed geometries and exchange couplings of the photoinduced multiexcitons in the pentacene dimers bridged by a phenylene at ortho and meta positions [denoted as o-(Pc)2 and m-(Pc)2] by simulations of the time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance spectra. We clarified that terahertz molecular conformation dynamics plays a role on the spin conversion from the singlet strongly coupled multiexcitons 1(TT) to the quintet state 5(TT). The strongly coupled 5(TT) multiexcitons are revealed to possess entirely planar conformations stabilized by mutually delocalized spin distributions, while the intramolecular de-coupled spin-correlated triplet pairs generated at 1 microsecond are also stabilized by distorted conformations resulting in two separately localized biradical characters
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