ABSTRACT
In order to optimize the performance of devices based on porphyrin thin films it is of great importance to gain a physical understanding of the various factors which affect their charge transport and light-harvesting properties. In this work, we have employed a multi-technique approach to study vacuum deposited zinc octaethyl porphyrin (ZnOEP) thin films with different degrees of long-range order as model systems. An asymmetrical stretching of the skeletal carbon atoms of the porphyrin conformer has been observed and attributed to ordered molecular stacking and intermolecular interactions. For ordered films, a detailed fitting analysis of the X-ray absorption near edge structure (XANES) using the MXAN code establishes a symmetry reduction in the molecular conformer involving the skeletal carbon atoms of the porphyrin ring; this highlights the consequences of increased π-π stacking of ZnOEP molecules adopting the triclinic structure. The observed asymmetrical stretching of the π conjugation network of the porphyrin structure can have significant implications for charge transport and light harvesting, significantly influencing the performance of porphyrin based devices.
ABSTRACT
The dynamics of the radical-radical reaction O((3)P) + C(3)H(5) has been investigated by means of the crossed molecular beam technique with mass spectrometric detection at a collision energy of 73.0 kJ mol(-1); the reaction mechanism of the H-displacement channel has been elucidated, while experimental evidence of the occurrence of one or more C-C bond-breaking channels at this collision energy has been obtained.
Subject(s)
Free Radicals/chemistry , Glycerol/analogs & derivatives , Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy/methods , Models, Chemical , Models, Molecular , Oxygen/chemistry , Computer Simulation , Oxidation-ReductionABSTRACT
To assess the relative reactivity of the spin-orbit excited state of atomic Cl with molecular hydrogen, we have measured differential cross sections using an atomic Cl beam with a known concentration of the ground and excited spin-orbit states. These are compared with the first determination of the cross sections from quantum mechanical scattering calculations on a set of coupled ab initio potential energy surfaces. The comparison suggests that these surfaces may underestimate the degree of rotational excitation of the HCl products and that the excited spin-orbit state plays a minor role in the reaction.