School of Chemistry - Research Publications

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    Liquid Crystallinity as a Self-Assembly Motif for High-Efficiency, Solution-Processed, Solid-State Singlet Fission Materials
    Masoomi-Godarzi, S ; Liu, M ; Tachibana, Y ; Mitchell, VD ; Goerigk, L ; Ghiggino, KP ; Smith, TA ; Jones, DJ (WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH, 2019-08)
    Abstract Solution and solution‐deposited thin films of the discotic liquid crystalline electron acceptor–donor–acceptor (A‐D‐A) p‐type organic semiconductor FHBC(TDPP)2, synthesized by coupling thienyl substituted diketopyrrolopyrrole (TDPP) onto a fluorenyl substituted hexa‐peri‐hexabenzocoronene (FHBC) core, are examined by ultrafast and nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, and time‐resolved photoluminescence studies to examine their ability to support singlet fission (SF). Grazing incidence wide‐angle X‐ray (GIWAX) studies indicate that as‐cast thin films of FHBC(TDPP)2 are “amorphous,” while hexagonal packed discotic liquid crystalline films evolve during thermal annealing. SF in as‐cast thin films is observed with an ≈150% triplet generation yield. Thermally annealing the thin films improves SF yields up to 170%. The as‐cast thin films show no long‐range order, indicating a new class of SF material where the requirement for local order and strong near neighbor coupling has been removed. Generation of long‐lived triplets (µs) suggests that these materials may also be suitable for inclusion in organic solar cells to enhance performance.
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    Solution-Processable, Solid State Donor-Acceptor Materials for Singlet Fission
    Masoomi-Godarzi, S ; Liu, M ; Tachibana, Y ; Goerigk, L ; Ghiggino, KP ; Smith, TA ; Jones, DJ (WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH, 2018-10-25)
    Abstract The exploitation of singlet fission (SF) materials in optoelectronic devices is restricted by the limited number of SF materials available and developing new organic materials that undergo singlet fission is a significant challenge. Using a new strategy based on conjugating strong donor and acceptor building blocks, the small molecule (BDT(DPP)2) and polymer (p‐BDT‐DPP) systems are designed and synthesized knowing that bisthiophene‐2,5‐dihydropyrrolo[3,4‐c]pyrrole‐1,4‐dione (DPP) has a low lying triplet energy level, which is further confirmed by time‐dependent density functional theory (TD‐DFT) calculations. TD‐DFT and natural transition orbital (NTO) analysis are conducted to gain insight into the photophysical properties and features of excited states in BDT(DPP)2, respectively. Femtosecond and nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopies are used to investigate the excited state kinetics in the synthesized compounds. Fast formation of triplet pairs in thin film of p‐BDT‐DPP and BDT(DPP)2 and the equilibrium formation of correlated triplet pairs and S1 from triplet–triplet annihilation in solution of BDT(DPP)2 are further evidence of SF in these compounds. The short triplet lifetime, as a result of fast biexcitonic recombination, provides additional support for triplet pair formation through singlet fission.
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    Reduced Recombination and Capacitor-like Charge Buildup in an Organic Heterojunction
    Schwarz, KN ; Geraghty, PB ; Mitchell, VD ; Khan, S-U-Z ; Sandberg, OJ ; Zarrabi, N ; Kudisch, B ; Subbiah, J ; Smith, TA ; Rand, BP ; Armin, A ; Scholes, GD ; Jones, DJ ; Ghiggino, KP (American Chemical Society, 2020-02-05)
    Organic photovoltaic (OPV) efficiencies continue to rise, raising their prospects for solar energy conversion. However, researchers have long considered how to suppress the loss of free carriers by recombination—poor diffusion and significant Coulombic attraction can cause electrons and holes to encounter each other at interfaces close to where they were photogenerated. Using femtosecond transient spectroscopies, we report the nanosecond grow-in of a large transient Stark effect, caused by nanoscale electric fields of ∼487 kV/cm between photogenerated free carriers in the device active layer. We find that particular morphologies of the active layer lead to an energetic cascade for charge carriers, suppressing pathways to recombination, which is ∼2000 times less than predicted by Langevin theory. This in turn leads to the buildup of electric charge in donor and acceptor domains—away from the interface—resistant to bimolecular recombination. Interestingly, this signal is only experimentally obvious in thick films due to the different scaling of electroabsorption and photoinduced absorption signals in transient absorption spectroscopy. Rather than inhibiting device performance, we show that devices up to 600 nm thick maintain efficiencies of >8% because domains can afford much higher carrier densities. These observations suggest that with particular nanoscale morphologies the bulk heterojunction can go beyond its established role in charge photogeneration and can act as a capacitor, where adjacent free charges are held away from the interface and can be protected from bimolecular recombination.
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    Energy Migration in Organic Solar Concentrators with a Molecularly Insulated Perylene Diimide
    Banal, JL ; Soleimaninejad, H ; Jradi, FM ; Liu, M ; White, JM ; Blakers, AW ; Cooper, MW ; Jones, DJ ; Ghiggino, KP ; Marder, SR ; Smith, TA ; Wong, WWH (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2016-06-23)
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    Highly Fluorescent Molecularly Insulated Perylene Diimides: Effect of Concentration on Photophysical Properties
    Zhang, B ; Soleimaninejad, H ; Jones, DJ ; White, JM ; Ghiggino, KP ; Smith, TA ; Wong, WWH (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2017-10-10)
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    High performance p-type molecular electron donors for OPV applications via alkylthiophene catenation chromophore extension
    Geraghty, PB ; Lee, C ; Subbiah, J ; Wong, WWH ; Banal, JL ; Jameel, MA ; Smith, TA ; Jones, DJ (BEILSTEIN-INSTITUT, 2016-11-02)
    The synthesis of key 4-alkyl-substituted 5-(trimethylsilyl)thiophene-2-boronic acid pinacol esters 3 allowed a simplified alkylthiophene catenation process to access bis-, ter-, quater-, and quinquethiophene π-bridges for the synthesis of acceptor-π-bridge-donor- π-bridge-acceptor (A-π-D-π-A) electron donor molecules. Based on the known benzodithiophene-terthiophene-rhodanine (BTR) material, the BXR series of materials, BMR (X = M, monothiophene), BBR (X = B, bithiophene), known BTR (X = T, terthiophene), BQR (X = Q, quaterthiophene), and BPR (X = P(penta), quinquethiophene) were synthesised to examine the influence of chromophore extension on the device performance and stability for OPV applications. The BTxR (x = 4, butyl, and x = 8, octyl) series of materials were synthesised by varying the oligothiophene π-bridge alkyl substituent to examine structure-property relationships in OPV device performance. The devices assembled using electron donors with an extended chromophore (BQR and BPR) are shown to be more thermally stable than the BTR containing devices, with un-optimized efficiencies up to 9.0% PCE. BQR has been incorporated as a secondary donor in ternary blend devices with PTB7-Th resulting in high-performance OPV devices with up to 10.7% PCE.