The Effects of Aggregation on Electronic and Optical Properties of Oligothiophene Particles
- 29 May 2012
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American Chemical Society (ACS) in ACS Nano
- Vol. 6 (6), 5507-5513
- https://doi.org/10.1021/nn301410j
Abstract
Solution processing of oligothiophene molecules is shown to produce a range of particles with distinct morphologies. Once isolated on a substrate, the optical and electronic properties of individual particles were studied. From polarized scanning confocal microscopy experiments, distinct particles that are identifiable by shape were shown to have similar emission spectra except in regard to the 0-0 vibronic band intensity. This suppression of the 0-0 vibronic band correlates to the amount of energetic disorder present in a weakly coupled H-aggregate. The studied particles ranged from moderate to almost complete suppression of the 0-0 vibronic band when compared to the emission spectrum of the isolated molecule in solution. All particles were found to have a high degree of geometric order (molecular alignment) as observed from the fluorescence dichroism (FD) values of around 0.7-0.8 for all the studied morphologies. The structural and electronic properties of the particles were investigated with Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM) to measure the local contact potential (LCP) difference, a quantity that is closely related to the differences in intermolecular charge distribution between the oligothiophene particles. The LCP was found to vary by as much as 70 mV between different oligothiophene particles and a trend was observed that correlated the LCP changes with the amount of energetic disorder present, as signified by the suppression of the 0-0 vibronic peak in the emission spectra. Combined polarized scanning confocal microscopy studies, along with KPFM measurements, help to provide fundamental insights into the role of morphology, molecular packing, and intermolecular charge distributions in oligiothiophene particles.Keywords
This publication has 34 references indexed in Scilit:
- π-Conjugated Polymers for Organic Electronics and Photovoltaic Cell ApplicationsChemistry of Materials, 2010
- Polymer Solar Cells: Recent Approaches and AchievementsThe Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 2009
- Strategies for Increasing the Efficiency of Heterojunction Organic Solar Cells: Material Selection and Device ArchitectureAccounts of Chemical Research, 2009
- Molecular Understanding of Organic Solar Cells: The ChallengesAccounts of Chemical Research, 2009
- “Plastic” Solar Cells: Self-Assembly of Bulk Heterojunction Nanomaterials by Spontaneous Phase SeparationAccounts of Chemical Research, 2009
- Polymer‐Fullerene Bulk‐Heterojunction Solar CellsAdvanced Materials, 2009
- From One‐ to Three‐Dimensional Organic Semiconductors: In Search of the Organic Silicon?Advanced Materials, 2007
- Toward High-Performance Polymer Solar Cells: The Importance of Morphology ControlMacromolecules, 2007
- Meeting the Clean Energy Demand: Nanostructure Architectures for Solar Energy ConversionThe Journal of Physical Chemistry C, 2007
- Supramolecular assembly of conjugated polymers: From molecular engineering to solid-state propertiesMaterials Science and Engineering: R: Reports, 2006