4.5 Article

Singlet Exciton Fission for Solar Cell Applications Energy Aspects of Interchromophore Coupling

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY B
Volume 114, Issue 45, Pages 14223-14232

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jp909002d

Keywords

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Funding

  1. U S Department of Energy EERE [DOE XAT 5-33636 01]
  2. U S Department of Energy Office of Basic Energy Sciences Division of Chemical Sciences Geosciences and Biosciences
  3. Ministry of Education of the Czech Republic [N00014 05 1 0021, OISE-0532040]
  4. DOE [1542544/XAT 5 33636 01, DE FG36 08GO18017]

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Singlet exciton fission, a process that converts one singlet exciton to a pair of triplet excitons has the potential to enhance the efficiency of both bulk heterojunction and dye-sensitized solar cells and is understood in crystals but not well understood in molecules Previous studies have identified promising building blocks for singlet fission in molecular systems but little work has investigated how these individual chromophores should be combined to maximize triplet yield We consider the effects of chemically connecting two chromophores to create a coupled chromophore pair and compute how various structural choices alter the thermodynamic and kinetic parameters likely to control singlet fission yield We use density functional theory to compute the electron transfer matrix element and the thermodynamics of fission for several promising chromophore pairs and find a trade-off between the desire to maximize this element and the desire to keep the singlet fission process exoergic We identify promising molecular systems for singlet fission and suggest future experiments

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