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Singlet exciton fission in a modified acene with improved stability and high photoluminescence yield

Authors :
Jesse R. Allardice
Peter Budden
Naitik A. Panjwani
Richard H. Friend
Michael Ganschow
Simon Dowland
Jan Freudenberg
Matthias Müller
Uwe H. F. Bunz
Leah R. Weiss
Jan Behrends
Budden, Peter J [0000-0002-8049-3401]
Panjwani, Naitik A [0000-0002-2913-5377]
Behrends, Jan [0000-0003-1024-428X]
Friend, Richard H [0000-0001-6565-6308]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Budden, Peter J. [0000-0002-8049-3401]
Panjwani, Naitik A. [0000-0002-2913-5377]
Friend, Richard H. [0000-0001-6565-6308]
Source :
Nature Communications, Vol 12, Iss 1, Pp 1-8 (2021), Nature Communications
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2021.

Abstract

We report a fully efficient singlet exciton fission material with high ambient chemical stability. 10,21-Bis(triisopropylsilylethynyl)tetrabenzo[a,c,l,n]pentacene (TTBP) combines an acene core with triphenylene wings that protect the formal pentacene from chemical degradation. The electronic energy levels position singlet exciton fission to be endothermic, similar to tetracene despite the triphenylenes. TTBP exhibits rapid early time singlet fission with quantitative yield of triplet pairs within 100 ps followed by thermally activated separation to free triplet excitons over 65 ns. TTBP exhibits high photoluminescence quantum efficiency, close to 100% when dilute and 20% for solid films, arising from triplet-triplet annihilation. In using such a system for exciton multiplication in a solar cell, maximum thermodynamic performance requires radiative decay of the triplet population, observed here as emission from the singlet formed by recombination of triplet pairs. Combining chemical stabilisation with efficient endothermic fission provides a promising avenue towards singlet fission materials for use in photovoltaics.<br />Designing optimised molecules for singlet fission is crucial to improve the efficiency of solar cells beyond its theoretical limit. Here, the authors investigate pentacene derivative TTBP, which exhibits high stability and luminescence yield, and find it highly suitable for exciton multiplication purposes.

Details

ISSN :
20411723
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Nature Communications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....c46d5f0d1ff9f77129228469c467b180