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Impact of non-equilibrium molecular packings on singlet fission in microcrystals observed using 2D white-light microscopy.

Andrew C JonesNicholas M KearnsJia-Jung HoJessica T FlachMartin T Zanni
Published in: Nature chemistry (2019)
Singlet fission, the process of splitting a singlet exciton into two triplet excitons, has been proposed as a mechanism for improving the efficiency of future photovoltaic devices. In organic semiconductors exhibiting singlet fission, the geometric relationship between molecules plays an important role by setting the intermolecular couplings that determine the system energetics. Here, we spatially image TIPS-pentacene microcrystals using ultrafast two-dimensional white-light microscopy and discover a low-energy singlet state sparsely distributed throughout the microcrystals, with higher concentrations at edges and morphological defects. The spectra of these singlet states are consistent with slip-stacked molecular geometries and increased charge-transfer couplings. The picosecond-timescale kinetics of these low-energy singlet states matches that of the correlated triplet-pair state, which we attribute to singlet/triplet-pair interconversion at these sites. Our observations support the conclusion that small populations of geometries with favourable energetics can play outsized roles in singlet fission processes.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • single molecule
  • high resolution
  • high speed
  • optical coherence tomography
  • machine learning
  • deep learning
  • molecular dynamics
  • genetic diversity