4.4 Article

Tuning ultrafast time-evolution of photo-induced charge-transfer states: A real-time electronic dynamics study in substituted indenotetracene derivatives

Journal

JOURNAL OF COMPUTATIONAL CHEMISTRY
Volume 45, Issue 4, Pages 210-221

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/jcc.27231

Keywords

electronic dynamics; indenotetracene; photo-induced charge-transfer; real-time TD-DFT; substituent effects

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The charge transfer dynamics in asymmetrically substituted indenotetracene molecules upon photo-excitation were investigated using real-time time-dependent density functional theory simulations. The study found that the electron-donating character of the substituents affects the overall electronic energy spacing and ultrafast charge transfer dynamics.
Photo-induced charge transfer (CT) states are pivotal in many technological and biological processes. A deeper knowledge of such states is mandatory for modeling the charge migration dynamics. Real-time time-dependent density functional theory (RT-TD-DFT) electronic dynamics simulations are employed to explicitly observe the electronic density time-evolution upon photo-excitation. Asymmetrically substituted indenotetracene molecules, given their potential application as n-type semiconductors in organic photovoltaic materials, are here investigated. Effects of substituents with different electron-donating characters are analyzed in terms of the overall electronic energy spacing and resulting ultrafast CT dynamics through linear response (LR-)TD-DFT and RT-TD-DFT based approaches. The combination of the computational techniques here employed provided direct access to the electronic density reorganization in time and to its spatial and rational representation in terms of molecular orbital occupation time evolution. Such results can be exploited to design peculiar directional charge dynamics, crucial when photoactive materials are used for light-harvesting applications.

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