Quantum interference effects elucidate triplet-pair formation dynamics in intramolecular singlet-fission molecules
Quantum interference (QI)—the constructive or destructive interference of conduction pathways through molecular orbitals—plays a fundamental role in enhancing or suppressing charge and spin transport in organic molecular electronics. Graphical models were developed to predict constructive versus des...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Nature chemistry 2023-03, Vol.15 (3), p.339-346 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Quantum interference (QI)—the constructive or destructive interference of conduction pathways through molecular orbitals—plays a fundamental role in enhancing or suppressing charge and spin transport in organic molecular electronics. Graphical models were developed to predict constructive versus destructive interference in polyaromatic hydrocarbons and have successfully estimated the large conductivity differences observed in single-molecule transport measurements. A major challenge lies in extending these models to excitonic (photoexcited) processes, which typically involve distinct orbitals with different symmetries. Here we investigate how QI models can be applied as bridging moieties in intramolecular singlet-fission compounds to predict relative rates of triplet pair formation. In a series of bridged intramolecular singlet-fission dimers, we found that destructive QI always leads to a slower triplet pair formation across different bridge lengths and geometries. A combined experimental and theoretical approach reveals the critical considerations of bridge topology and frontier molecular orbital energies in applying QI conductance principles to predict rates of multiexciton generation.
Principles of quantum interference can guide the design of chromophores that undergo singlet fission. Now, ‘pencil and paper’ graphical models can be used to understand and predict the dynamics of triplet pairs generated through singlet fission in bridged dimers. |
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ISSN: | 1755-4330 1755-4349 |
DOI: | 10.1038/s41557-022-01107-8 |