Perspective: Optical spectroscopy in π-conjugated polymers and how it can be used to determine multiscale polymer structures

Exciton delocalization in conjugated polymer systems is determined by polymer conformations and packing. Since exciton delocalization determines the photoluminescent vibronic progression, optical spectroscopy provides an indirect link to polymer multiscale structures. This perspective describes our...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Journal of chemical physics 2017-04, Vol.146 (13), p.130902-130902
Hauptverfasser: Barford, William, Marcus, Max
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Exciton delocalization in conjugated polymer systems is determined by polymer conformations and packing. Since exciton delocalization determines the photoluminescent vibronic progression, optical spectroscopy provides an indirect link to polymer multiscale structures. This perspective describes our current theoretical understanding of how exciton delocalization in π-conjugated polymers determines their optical spectroscopy and further shows how exciton delocalization is related to conformational and environmental disorder. If the multiscale structures in conjugated polymer systems are known, then using first-principles modeling of excitonic processes it is possible to predict a wide-range of spectroscopic observables. We propose a reverse-engineering protocol of using these experimental observables in combination with theoretical and computational modeling to determine the multiscale polymers structures, thus establishing quantitative structure-function predictions.
ISSN:0021-9606
1089-7690
DOI:10.1063/1.4979495