4.6 Article

Solvent Thermodynamic Driving Force Controls Stacking Interactions between Polyaromatics

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYSICAL CHEMISTRY C
Volume 120, Issue 41, Pages 23858-23869

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b08292

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [CHE-0713981]
  2. Anton Burg Foundation

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Polyaromatic dye molecules employed in photovoltaic and electronic applications are often processed in organic solvents. The aggregation of these dyes is key to their applications, but a fundamental molecular understanding of how the solvent environment controls the stacking of polyaromatics is unclear. This study reports initial results from Monte Carlo simulations of how various acene molecule dimers stack when they are dissolved in different solvents. Free energies computed using full dispersion interactions versus those with sterics. only suggest that solvent entropy alone accounts for the majority of the stacking free energy in solvents with compact molecular geometries such as carbon tetrachloride. However, in contrast with carbon tetrachloride, we also observe significant variations in the stacking free energies of naphthalene, anthracene, and tetracene across other solvents such as toluene and cyclohexane. The weak attractive dispersion interactions between the acene solutes and planar and near-planar solvent molecules enable them to intercalate between the acene monomers, inducing extra stability beyond what solvent entropic driving force alone could predict. In all three solvents studied (carbon tetrachloride, cyclohexane, toluene) the solvent environment helps facilitate stacking of all three acenes studied (naphthalene, anthracene, tetracene), inducing a significant stabilization free energy between -4 and -8 kcal/mol. Extensive free energy umbrella sampling along the other orthogonal directions allows us to accurately calculate the dimerization equilibrium constants of all three acenes, which vary over several orders of magnitude in a way that depends intricately on the solvent they are in. Given the prevalence of solution-based processing techniques for organic electronic and photonic devices, these results provide useful insights into the critical role that solvent structure and characteristics play in the solution-based aggregation of organic dyes.

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