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1.
J Phys Chem A ; 128(4): 747-760, 2024 Feb 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38232326

RESUMO

Modifying the optical and electronic properties of crystalline organic thin films is of great interest for improving the performance of modern organic semiconductor devices. Therein, the statistical mixing of molecules to form a solid solution provides an opportunity to fine-tune optical and electronic properties. Unfortunately, the diversity of intermolecular interactions renders mixed organic crystals highly complex, and a holistic picture is still lacking. Here, we report a study of the optical absorption properties in solid solutions of pentacene and tetracene, two prototypical organic semiconductors. In the mixtures, the optical properties can be continuously modified by statistical mixing at the molecular level. Comparison with time-dependent density functional theory calculations on occupationally disordered clusters unravels the electronic origin of the low energy optical transitions. The disorder partially relaxes the selection rules, leading to additional optical transitions that manifest as optical broadening. Furthermore, the contribution of diabatic charge-transfer states is modified in the mixtures, reducing the observed splitting in the 0-0 vibronic transition. Additional comparisons with other blended systems generalize our results and indicate that changes in the polarizability of the molecular environment in organic thin-film blends induce shifts in the absorption spectrum.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(12): 4435-4442, 2017 03 29.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28319405

RESUMO

Acenes comprise an important class of organic semiconducting materials. As graphene nanoribbons of ultimate width, they are valuable atom-precise model systems for studying the properties of this form of nanoscale carbon materials. Heptacene is the smallest member of the acene series that could only be studied under matrix isolation conditions. Its existence in bulk had never been positively confirmed, despite efforts dating back more than 70 years. We report that the reduction of 7,16-heptacenequinone produces a mixture of two diheptacene molecules. The diheptacenes undergo thermal cleavage to heptacene at high temperatures in the solid state. Monitoring this cycloreversion by solid state 13C cross-polarized magic angle spinning NMR reveals that solid heptacene has a half-life time of several weeks at room temperature. The diheptacenes are valuable precursors for generating films of heptacene by vapor phase deposition that can be studied below or at room temperature.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 121(44): 8359-8367, 2017 Nov 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28949535

RESUMO

Boron-nitrogen doping of polyaromatic hydrocarbon (PAH) materials can be used to tune their electronic properties while preserving the structural characteristics of pure hydrocarbons. Many multicycle PAHs can be synthesized photochemically; in contrast, very little is known about the photochemistry of their BN-doped counterparts. We present results of fs, ns, and µs time-resolved spectroscopic studies on the photoinduced dynamics of hexaphenyl benzene and hexaphenyl borazine in order to examine how BN doping alters photochemical C-C bond formation via 6π electrocyclization as well as the stability of resulting cyclized structures. Ultrafast measurements reveal photoinduced behaviors reflecting differences in excited-state decay pathways for the two molecules, with hexaphenyl borazine relaxing from its excited state with a rate that is 2 orders of magnitude faster than that of hexaphenyl benzene (3.0 vs 428 ps). Tetraphenyl dihydrotriphenylene generated from hexaphenyl benzene is observed to reopen with a ∼2 µs lifetime controlled by entropic stabilization of the cyclized structure; in contrast, photoinduced dynamics appear to be complete within 100 ps after excitation of hexaphenyl borazine. This significant difference in photochemical dynamics is reflected in the cyclodehydrogentation yields obtained for the two reactants (25 vs 0% for hexaphenyl benzene and borazine, respectively). Quantum-chemical computations predict that BN doping gives rise to energetic destabilization and increased singlet diradical character in cyclized structures. These findings indicate that the polarized BN bonds of the borazine core adversely impact photochemical bond formation relative to analogous hydrocarbons.

4.
J Phys Chem A ; 121(27): 5136-5146, 2017 Jul 13.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28625051

RESUMO

Boron-nitrogen doping of polyaromatic hydrocarbons (PAH), such as borazine-core hexabenzocoronene, presents possibilities for tuning the properties of organic electronics and nanographene materials while preserving structural characteristics of pure hydrocarbons. Previous photochemical studies have demonstrated extension of a borazine-core PAH network (1,2:3,4:5,6-tris(o,o'-biphenylylene)borazine, 1) by photoinduced cyclodehydrogenation. We present steady-state and femtosecond-to-microsecond resolved spectroscopic studies of the photophysics of 1 and a related borazine-core PAH in order to characterize competing excited-state relaxation pathways that determine the efficacy of bond formation by photocyclization. Transient spectra evolve on time scales consistent with S1 fluorescence lifetimes (1-3 ns) to features that persist onto microsecond time scales. Nanosecond-resolved oxygen-quenching measurements reveal that long-lived metastable states are triplets rather than cyclized products. Determination of fluorescence and triplet quantum yields reveal that photochemical bond formation is a minor channel in the relaxation of 1 (∼5% or less), whereas highly efficient fluorescence and intersystem crossing result in negligible photoinduced bond formation in more extended borazine-core networks. Results of computational investigations at the RICC2 level reveal sizable barriers to cyclization on the S1 potential energy surfaces consistent with quantum yields deduced from experiment. Together these barriers and competing photophysical pathways limit the efficiency of photochemical synthesis of BN-doped polyaromatics.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(16): 19218-19225, 2020 Apr 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32223213

RESUMO

Electronic interface properties and the initial growth of hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene with a borazine core (BN-HBC) on Au(111) have been studied by using X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), low-energy electron diffraction (LEED), and scanning tunneling microscopy (STM). A weak, but non-negligible, interaction between BN-HBC and Au(111) was found at the interface. Both hexa-peri-hexabenzocoronene (HBC) and BN-HBC molecules form well-defined monolayers. The different contrast in STM images of HBC and BN-HBC at different tunneling voltages with submolecular resolution can be ascribed to differences in the local density of states (LDOS). At positive and negative tunneling voltages, STM images reproduce the distribution of the highest occupied and lowest unoccupied molecular orbitals (HOMO and LUMO) as determined by density functional theory (DFT) calculations very well.

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