172,436 research outputs found
Electrical photosemiconducting and paramagnetic properties of polypyromellitimides
Semiconducting properties with dark and photoconductivity, type r, were observed in polypyromellitimides (PPMI) and explained by a donor-acceptor interreaction in the PPMI between electron acceptor promellitimide fragments and electron donor diamide in adjacent macromolecules
Electron Transfer in Porphyrin Complexes in Different Solvents
The electron transfer in different solvents is investigated for systems
consisting of donor, bridge and acceptor. It is assumed that vibrational
relaxation is much faster than the electron transfer. Electron transfer rates
and final populations of the acceptor state are calculated numerically and in
an approximate fashion analytically. In wide parameter regimes these solutions
are in very good agreement. The theory is applied to the electron transfer in
with free-base porphyrin () being the donor,
zinc porphyrin () the bridge, and quinone () the acceptor.
It is shown that the electron transfer rates can be controlled efficiently by
changing the energy of the bridging level which can be done by changing the
solvent. The effect of the solvent is determined for different models.Comment: 28 pages + 5 figures, submitted to J. Phys. Chem. For more details
see the Ph. D. thesis in quant-ph archive
http://xxx.lanl.gov/abs/quant-ph/000100
Lithium related deep and shallow acceptors in Li-doped ZnO nanocrystals
This article may be downloaded for personal use only. Any other use requires prior permission of the author and AIP Publishing. This article appeared in Journal of Applied Physics 107, 024311 (2010) and may be found at https://doi.org/10.1063/1.3275889.We study the existence of Li-related shallow and deep acceptor levels in Li-doped ZnO nanocrystals using electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) and photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy. ZnO nanocrystals with adjustable Li concentrations between 0% and 12% have been prepared using organometallic precursors and show a significant lowering of the Fermi energy upon doping. The deep Li acceptor with an acceptor energy of 800 meV could be identified in both EPR and PL measurements and is responsible for the yellow luminescence at 2.2 eV. Additionally, a shallow acceptor state at 150 meV above the valence band maximum is made responsible for the observed donor-acceptor pair and free electron-acceptor transitions at 3.235 and 3.301 eV, possibly stemming from the formation of Li-related defect complexes acting as acceptors.DFG, 43659573, SFB 787: Halbleiter - Nanophotonik: Materialien, Modelle, Bauelement
Theory of Primary Photoexcitations in Donor-Acceptor Copolymers
We present a generic theory of primary photoexcitations in low band gap
donor-acceptor conjugated copolymers. Because of the combined effects of strong
electron correlations and broken symmetry, there is considerable mixing between
a charge-transfer exciton and an energetically proximate triplet-triplet state
with an overall spin singlet. The triplet-triplet state, optically forbidden in
homopolymers, is allowed in donor-acceptor copolymers. For an intermediate
difference in electron affinities of the donor and the acceptor, the
triplet-triplet state can have stronger oscillator strength than the
charge-transfer exciton. We discuss the possibility of intramolecular singlet
fission from the triplet-triplet state, and how such fission can be detected
experimentally.Comment: 6 pages, 4 figures, 4 pages of Supplemental Material including 4
figure
Extraordinary sensitivity of the electronic structure and properties of single-walled carbon nanotubes to molecular charge-transfer
Interaction of single-walled carbon nanotubes with electron donor and
acceptor molecules causes significant changes in the electronic and Raman
spectra, the relative proportion of the metallic species increasing on electron
donation through molecular charge transfer, as also verified by electrical
resistivity measurements.Comment: 15 pages, 5 figurre
Ultrafast light-induced response of photoactive yellow protein chromophore analogues
The fluorescence decays of several analogues of the photoactive yellow protein (PYP) chromophore in aqueous solution have been measured by femtosecond fluorescence up-conversion and the corresponding time-resolved fluorescence spectra have been reconstructed. The native chromophore of PYP is a thioester derivative of p-coumaric acid in its trans deprotonated form. Fluorescence kinetics are reported for a thioester phenyl analogue and for two analogues where the thioester group has been changed to amide and carboxylate groups. The kinetics are compared to those we previously reported for the analogues bearing ketone and ester groups. The fluorescence decays of the full series are found to lie in the 1–10 ps range depending on the electron-acceptor character of the substituent, in good agreement with the excited-state relaxation kinetics extracted from transient absorption measurements. Steady-state photolysis is also examined and found to depend strongly on the nature of the substituent. While it has been shown that the ultrafast light-induced response of the chromophore in PYP is controlled by the properties of the protein nanospace, the present results demonstrate that, in solution, the relaxation dynamics and pathway of the chromophore is controlled by its electron donor–acceptor structure: structures of stronger electron donor–acceptor character lead to faster decays and less photoisomerisation
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