scholarly journals Quantum Simulations of Charge Separation at a Model Donor-Acceptor Interface: Role of Delocalization and Local Packing

2018 ◽  
Vol 2018 ◽  
pp. 1-10 ◽  
Author(s):  
Allen Kelley ◽  
Kush Patel ◽  
Eric R. Bittner

Organic Polymer-based photovoltaic systems offer a viable alternative to more standard solid-state devices for light-harvesting applications. In this study, we investigate the electronic dynamics of a model organic photovoltaic (OPV) heterojunction consisting of polyphenylene vinylene (PPV) oligomers and a [6,6]-phenyl C61-butyric acid methyl ester (PCBM) blend. Our approach treats the classical molecular dynamics of the atoms within an Ehrenfest mean-field treatment of the π-π⁎ singly excited states spanning a subset of donor and acceptor molecules near the phase boundary of the blend. Our results indicate that interfacial electronic states are modulated by C=C bond stretching motions and that such motions induce avoided crossings between nearby excited states thereby facilitating transitions from localized excitonic configurations to delocalized charge-separated configurations on an ultrafast time-scale. The lowest few excited states of the model interface rapidly mix allowing low frequency C-C out-of-plane torsions to modulate the potential energy surface such that the system can sample both intermolecular charge-transfer and charge-separated electronic configurations on sub-100 fs time scales. Our simulations support an emerging picture of carrier generation in OPV systems in which interfacial electronic states can rapidly decay into charge-separated and current producing states via coupling to vibronic degrees of freedom.

1992 ◽  
Vol 96 (10) ◽  
pp. 7229-7236 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marek Z. Zgierski ◽  
Francesco Zerbetto ◽  
Young‐Dong Shin ◽  
Edward C. Lim

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Shee ◽  
Martin Head-Gordon

Electronically-excited states characterized by intramolecular charge-transfer play an essential role in many biological processes and optical devices. The ability to make quantitative ab initio predictions of the relative energetics involved is a challenging yet desirable goal, especially for large molecules in solution. In this work we present a data set of 61 experimental measurements of absorption and emission processes, both in the gas phase and solvents representing a broad range of polarities, which involve intramolecular charge-transfer mediated by a non-zero, “twisted” dihedral angle between one or more donor and acceptor subunits. Among a variety of density functionals investigated within the framework of linear-response theory, the “optimally tuned” LRC-ωPBE functional, which utilizes a system-specific yet non-empirical procedure to specify the range-separation parameter, emerges as the preferred choice. For the entire set of excitation energies, involving changes in dipole moment ranging from 4 to >20 Debye, the mean signed and absolute errors are 0.02 and 0.18 eV, respectively (compared, e.g., to -0.30 and 0.30 for PBE0, 0.44 and 0.47 for LRC-ωPBEh, 0.83 and 0.83 for ωB97X-V). The performance of polarizable continuum solvation models for these charge-transfer excited states is closely examined, and clear trends emerge when measurements corresponding to the four small DMABN-like molecules and a charged species are excluded. We make the case that the large errors found only for small molecules in the gas phase and weak solvents cannot be expected to improve via the optimal tuning procedure, which enforces a condition that is exact only in the wellseparated donor-acceptor limit, and present empirical evidence implicating the outsized importance for small donor-acceptor systems of relaxation effects that cannot be accounted for by linear-response TDDFT within the adiabatic approximation. Finally, we demonstrate the utility of the optimally tuned density functional approach by targeting the charge-transfer states of a large biomimetic model system for light-harvesting structures in Photosystem II.


2019 ◽  
Vol 20 (2) ◽  
pp. 127-132
Author(s):  
Yu.V. Stadnyk ◽  
V.V. Romaka ◽  
V.A. Romaka ◽  
A.M. Нoryn ◽  
L.P. Romaka ◽  
...  

The peculiarities of electronic and crystal structures of Zr1-xVxNiSn (x = 0 - 0.10) semiconductive solid solution were investigated. To predict Fermi level εF behavior, band gap εg and electrokinetic characteristics of Zr1-xVxNiSn, the distribution of density of electronic states (DOS) was calculated. The mechanism of simultaneous generation of structural defects of donor and acceptor nature was determined based on the results of calculations of electronic structure and measurement of electrical properties of Zr1-xVxNiSn semiconductive solid solution. It was established that in the band gap of Zr1-xVxNiSn the energy states of the impurity donor εD2 and acceptor εA1 levels (donor-acceptor pairs) appear, which determine the mechanisms of conduction of semiconductor.


Author(s):  
С.В. Феськов ◽  
С.С. Хохлова

Предложены подходы к численному решению систем уравнений, описывающих кинетику двухстадийной фотохимической реакции в вязком полярном растворителе. Математическая модель построена на основе расширенной интегральной теории встреч и учитывает диффузионную подвижность молекул-реагентов в жидкости, неравновесность среды и внутримолекулярных степеней свободы, удаленный перенос электрона в донорно-акцепторных парах, разделенных растворителем. В рамках метода броуновского моделирования разработаны алгоритмы расчета безреакционных стохастических траекторий частиц на поверхностях свободной энергии, соответствующих различным состояниям реагентов и продуктов, схемы детектирования реакционных событий и генерации электронных прыжков, а также алгоритмы расчета нестационарных потоков частиц между электронными состояниями и вычисления интегральных ядер кинетических уравнений. Представлены результаты тестовых расчетов, демонстрирующие корректность численного решения и воспроизводящие известные особенности реакций электронного переноса в полярных жидкостях. Efficient approaches to the numerical solution of equations describing the kinetics of two-stage photochemical reactions in a viscous polar solvent are proposed. The mathematical model is based on the extended integral encounter theory and takes into account diffusive mobility of reactants in solution, nonequilibrium of solvent and intramolecular degrees of freedom, and remote electron transfer in solvent-separated donor-acceptor pairs. In the framework of the Brownian simulation technique, a number of numerical algorithms for calculating unreactive stochastic trajectories of particles on free energy surfaces corresponding to different electronic states of reactants and products are suggested, some computational schemes for the detection of reaction events and the generation of electronic hops are developed, and algorithms for calculating the time-dependent reaction fluxes between the electronic states and integral kernels of the kinetic equations are implemented. The results of test simulations demonstrating the validity of the numerical solutions and reproducing well-known features of electron transfer reactions in polar solvents are discussed.


2003 ◽  
Vol 17 (03) ◽  
pp. 319-336 ◽  
Author(s):  
XIN-ZHONG YAN

We present a self-consistent approach to deal with the pairing-fluctuation effects in quasi-two-dimensional superconducting systems. Besides the Cooper pairs in the Bose–Einstein condensate, there are pairs occupying the excited states, which results in the predominant fluctuations. The low-lying excited states are the collective modes. On the basis of ladder-diagram approximation, we treat the single particles and the pairs on an equal-footing manner. The Green's function of single particles is obtained as an analytic solution to a cubic equation. The bosonic degrees of freedom are relevant to the pseudogap physics in the high-T c cuprates. The superconducting order parameter and the transition temperature are substantially reduced from the values of the mean-field theory. The calculated phase boundary of superconducting state can reasonably describe the experiment data for cuprates.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Shee ◽  
Martin Head-Gordon

Electronically-excited states characterized by intramolecular charge-transfer play an essential role in many biological processes and optical devices. The ability to make quantitative ab initio predictions of the relative energetics involved is a challenging yet desirable goal, especially for large molecules in solution. In this work we present a data set of 61 experimental measurements of absorption and emission processes, both in the gas phase and solvents representing a broad range of polarities, which involve intramolecular charge-transfer mediated by a non-zero, “twisted” dihedral angle between one or more donor and acceptor subunits. Among a variety of density functionals investigated within the framework of linear-response theory, the “optimally tuned” LRC-ωPBE functional, which utilizes a system-specific yet non-empirical procedure to specify the range-separation parameter, emerges as the preferred choice. For the entire set of excitation energies, involving changes in dipole moment ranging from 4 to >20 Debye, the mean signed and absolute errors are 0.02 and 0.18 eV, respectively (compared, e.g., to -0.30 and 0.30 for PBE0, 0.44 and 0.47 for LRC-ωPBEh, 0.83 and 0.83 for ωB97X-V). The performance of polarizable continuum solvation models for these charge-transfer excited states is closely examined, and clear trends emerge when measurements corresponding to the four small DMABN-like molecules and a charged species are excluded. We make the case that the large errors found only for small molecules in the gas phase and weak solvents cannot be expected to improve via the optimal tuning procedure, which enforces a condition that is exact only in the wellseparated donor-acceptor limit, and present empirical evidence implicating the outsized importance for small donor-acceptor systems of relaxation effects that cannot be accounted for by linear-response TDDFT within the adiabatic approximation. Finally, we demonstrate the utility of the optimally tuned density functional approach by targeting the charge-transfer states of a large biomimetic model system for light-harvesting structures in Photosystem II.


Author(s):  
John H. D. Eland ◽  
Raimund Feifel

Double ionisation of the triatomic molecules presented in this chapter shows an added degree of complexity. Besides potentially having many more electrons, they have three vibrational degrees of freedom (three normal modes) instead of the single one in a diatomic molecule. For asymmetric and bent triatomic molecules multiple modes can be excited, so the spectral bands may be congested in all forms of electronic spectra, including double ionisation. Double photoionisation spectra of H2O, H2S, HCN, CO2, N2O, OCS, CS2, BrCN, ICN, HgCl2, NO2, and SO2 are presented with analysis to identify the electronic states of the doubly charged ions. The order of the molecules in this chapter is set first by the number of valence electrons, then by the molecular weight.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Tao Wang ◽  
Zhubin Hu ◽  
Xiancheng Nie ◽  
Linkun Huang ◽  
Miao Hui ◽  
...  

AbstractAggregation-induced emission (AIE) has proven to be a viable strategy to achieve highly efficient room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) in bulk by restricting molecular motions. Here, we show that by utilizing triphenylamine (TPA) as an electronic donor that connects to an acceptor via an sp3 linker, six TPA-based AIE-active RTP luminophores were obtained. Distinct dual phosphorescence bands emitting from largely localized donor and acceptor triplet emitting states could be recorded at lowered temperatures; at room temperature, only a merged RTP band is present. Theoretical investigations reveal that the two temperature-dependent phosphorescence bands both originate from local/global minima from the lowest triplet excited state (T1). The reported molecular construct serves as an intermediary case between a fully conjugated donor-acceptor system and a donor/acceptor binary mix, which may provide important clues on the design and control of high-freedom molecular systems with complex excited-state dynamics.


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