4.8 Article

Aggregation of Charge Acceptors on Nanocrystal Surfaces Alters Rates of Photoinduced Electron Transfer

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 49, Pages 22676-22688

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c09758

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Center for Adapting Flaws into Features, an NSF Center for Chemical Innovation [CHE-2124983]
  2. Welch Foundation [F-1885, F-1188]
  3. National Science Foundation [DGE-1610403]
  4. Big-Data Private-Cloud Research Cyberinfrastructure MRI award - NSF [F-1885]
  5. Rice Universit's Center for Research Computing (CRC)
  6. NIH [CHE-2124983]
  7. Advanced Micro Devices (AMD)

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Semiconductor nanocrystals interfaced with molecular ligands have potential applications in light-harvesting, photonupconverting, and photocatalytic materials. We demonstrated that ligand aggregation can alter the rate of electron transfer between nanocrystals and organic acceptor ligands, which should be considered for designing hybrid systems.
Semiconductor nanocrystals (NCs) interfaced with molecular ligands that function as charge and energy acceptors are an emerging platform for the design of light-harvesting, photonupconverting, and photocatalytic materials. However, NC systems explored for these applications often feature high concentrations of bound acceptor ligands, which can lead to ligand-ligand interactions that may alter each system's ability to undergo charge and energy transfer. Here, we demonstrate that aggregation of acceptor ligands impacts the rate of photoinduced NC-to-ligand charge transfer between lead(II) sulfide (PbS) NCs and perylenediimide (PDI) electron acceptors. As the concentration of PDI acceptors is increased, we find the average electron transfer rate from PbS to PDI ligands decreases by nearly an order of magnitude. The electron transfer rate slowdown with increasing PDI concentration correlates strongly with the appearance of PDI aggregates in steady-state absorption spectra. Electronic structure calculations and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations suggest PDI aggregation slows the rate of electron transfer by reducing orbital overlap between PbS charge donors and PDI charge acceptors. While we find aggregation slows electron transfer in this system, the computational models we employ predict ligand aggregation could also be used to speed electron transfer by producing delocalized states that exhibit improved NC-molecule electronic coupling and energy alignment with NC conduction band states. Our results demonstrate that ligand aggregation can alter rates of photoinduced electron transfer between NCs and organic acceptor ligands and should be considered when designing hybrid NC:molecule systems for charge separation.

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