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Excimer-Mediated Intermolecular Charge Transfer in Self-Assembled Donor-Acceptor Dyes on Metal Oxides.

Excimer-Mediated Intermolecular Charge Transfer in Self-Assembled Donor-Acceptor Dyes on Metal... When conjugate molecules are self-assembled on the surface of semiconductors, emergent properties resulting from the electronic coupling between the conjugate moieties are of importance in the interfacial electron-transfer dynamics for photoelectrochemical and optoelectronics devices. In this work, we investigate the self-assembly of triphenylamine-oligothiophene-perylenemonoimide (PMI) molecules, denoted as BH4, on metal oxide surfaces via UV-vis absorption, photoluminescence, and transient near-infrared absorption spectroscopies and molecular dynamics simulations, and we report the excimer formation due to the π-π interaction of the PMI units between the neighboring dye molecules. To our best knowledge, this is the first experimental observation of intermolecular excimer formation when conjugate donor-acceptor molecules form a self-assembled monolayer. In addition, a long-lived (4.3 μs) intermolecular charge separation is observed, and a new excimer-mediated intermolecular charger-transfer mechanism is proposed. This work demonstrates that, through the design of dye molecules, the excited complexes or aggregates can provide a pathway to slow down the recombination rate in photoelectrodes that utilize donor-acceptor dyad molecules. http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of the American Chemical Society Pubmed

Excimer-Mediated Intermolecular Charge Transfer in Self-Assembled Donor-Acceptor Dyes on Metal Oxides.

Journal of the American Chemical Society , Volume 141 (22): 5 – Jul 23, 2019

Excimer-Mediated Intermolecular Charge Transfer in Self-Assembled Donor-Acceptor Dyes on Metal Oxides.


Abstract

When conjugate molecules are self-assembled on the surface of semiconductors, emergent properties resulting from the electronic coupling between the conjugate moieties are of importance in the interfacial electron-transfer dynamics for photoelectrochemical and optoelectronics devices. In this work, we investigate the self-assembly of triphenylamine-oligothiophene-perylenemonoimide (PMI) molecules, denoted as BH4, on metal oxide surfaces via UV-vis absorption, photoluminescence, and transient near-infrared absorption spectroscopies and molecular dynamics simulations, and we report the excimer formation due to the π-π interaction of the PMI units between the neighboring dye molecules. To our best knowledge, this is the first experimental observation of intermolecular excimer formation when conjugate donor-acceptor molecules form a self-assembled monolayer. In addition, a long-lived (4.3 μs) intermolecular charge separation is observed, and a new excimer-mediated intermolecular charger-transfer mechanism is proposed. This work demonstrates that, through the design of dye molecules, the excited complexes or aggregates can provide a pathway to slow down the recombination rate in photoelectrodes that utilize donor-acceptor dyad molecules.

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References (37)

ISSN
0002-7863
DOI
10.1021/jacs.9b03729
pmid
31095391

Abstract

When conjugate molecules are self-assembled on the surface of semiconductors, emergent properties resulting from the electronic coupling between the conjugate moieties are of importance in the interfacial electron-transfer dynamics for photoelectrochemical and optoelectronics devices. In this work, we investigate the self-assembly of triphenylamine-oligothiophene-perylenemonoimide (PMI) molecules, denoted as BH4, on metal oxide surfaces via UV-vis absorption, photoluminescence, and transient near-infrared absorption spectroscopies and molecular dynamics simulations, and we report the excimer formation due to the π-π interaction of the PMI units between the neighboring dye molecules. To our best knowledge, this is the first experimental observation of intermolecular excimer formation when conjugate donor-acceptor molecules form a self-assembled monolayer. In addition, a long-lived (4.3 μs) intermolecular charge separation is observed, and a new excimer-mediated intermolecular charger-transfer mechanism is proposed. This work demonstrates that, through the design of dye molecules, the excited complexes or aggregates can provide a pathway to slow down the recombination rate in photoelectrodes that utilize donor-acceptor dyad molecules.

Journal

Journal of the American Chemical SocietyPubmed

Published: Jul 23, 2019

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