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Efficient energy transport in an organic semiconductor mediated by transient exciton delocalization.

Alexander J SneydTomoya FukuiDavid PalečekSuryoday ProdhanIsabella WagnerYifan ZhangJooyoung SungSean Michael CollinsThomas J A SlaterZahra Andaji-GarmaroudiLiam R MacFarlaneJ Diego Garcia-HernandezLinjun WangGeorge R WhittellJustin M HodgkissKai ChenDavid BeljonneIan MannersRichard Henry FriendAkshay Rao
Published in: Science advances (2021)
Efficient energy transport is desirable in organic semiconductor (OSC) devices. However, photogenerated excitons in OSC films mostly occupy highly localized states, limiting exciton diffusion coefficients to below ~10-2 cm2/s and diffusion lengths below ~50 nm. We use ultrafast optical microscopy and nonadiabatic molecular dynamics simulations to study well-ordered poly(3-hexylthiophene) nanofiber films prepared using living crystallization-driven self-assembly, and reveal a highly efficient energy transport regime: transient exciton delocalization, where energy exchange with vibrational modes allows excitons to temporarily re-access spatially extended states under equilibrium conditions. We show that this enables exciton diffusion constants up to 1.1 ± 0.1 cm2/s and diffusion lengths of 300 ± 50 nm. Our results reveal the dynamic interplay between localized and delocalized exciton configurations at equilibrium conditions, calling for a re-evaluation of exciton dynamics and suggesting design rules to engineer efficient energy transport in OSC device architectures not based on restrictive bulk heterojunctions.
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