APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session X41: Focus Session: Electronic Structure and Applications to Energy Conversion II
2:30 PM–5:18 PM,
Thursday, March 24, 2011
Room: A115/117
Sponsoring
Unit:
DCP
Chair: Troy van Voorhis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.X41.4
Abstract: X41.00004 : Exciton transport and dissociation at organic interfaces
3:30 PM–4:06 PM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
David Beljonne
(University of Mons)
This paper focuses on modeling studies of exciton transport and
dissociation
at organic interfaces and includes three parts:
1) Experiments have shown that the values of exciton diffusion
length
$L_{D}$ in conjugated polymers (CPs) are rather low, in the range
of 5-10 nm,
apparently regardless of their chemical structure and solid-state
packing.
In contrast, larger $L_{D}$ values have been reported in
molecular materials
that are chemically more well-defined than CPs. Here we
demonstrate that
energetic disorder alone reduces the exciton diffusion length
more than one
order of magnitude, from values typically encountered in
molecules ($>$50nm)
to values actually measured in CPs ($<$10nm).
2) A number of organic crystals show anisotropic excitonic
couplings, with
weak interlayer interactions between molecules that are more
strongly
coupled within the layers. The resulting energy carriers are
intra-layer 2D
excitons that diffuse along the interlayer direction. We model this
analytically for infinite layers and using quantum-chemical
calculations of
the electronic couplings for anthracene clusters. We show that
the exciton
hopping rates and diffusion lengths depend in a subtle manner on
the size
and shape of the interacting aggregates, temperature and the
presence of
energetic disorder.
3) The electronic structure at organic/organic interfaces plays a
key role,
among others, in defining the quantum efficiency of organic-based
photovoltaic cells. Here, we perform quantum-chemical and
microelectrostatic
calculations on molecular aggregates of various sizes and shapes to
characterize the interfacial dipole moment at pentacene/C60
heterojunctions.
The results show that the interfacial dipole mostly originates in
polarization effects due to the asymmetry in the multipolar
expansion of the
electronic density distribution between the interacting
molecules. We will
discuss how the quadrupoles on the pentacene molecules produce
direct
electrostatic interactions with charge carriers and how these
interactions
in turn affect the energy landscape around the interface and
therefore also
the energy barrier for exciton dissociation into free carriers.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.X41.4