Exciton Delocalization Counteracts the Energy Gap: A New Pathway toward NIR-Emissive Dyes


Journal article


A. Cravcenco, Yi-Xiang Yu, Fredrik Edhborg, J. Goebel, Z. Takács, Yizhou Yang, B. Albinsson, Karl Börjesson
Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2021

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APA   Click to copy
Cravcenco, A., Yu, Y.-X., Edhborg, F., Goebel, J., Takács, Z., Yang, Y., … Börjesson Karl. (2021). Exciton Delocalization Counteracts the Energy Gap: A New Pathway toward NIR-Emissive Dyes. Journal of the American Chemical Society.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Cravcenco, A., Yi-Xiang Yu, Fredrik Edhborg, J. Goebel, Z. Takács, Yizhou Yang, B. Albinsson, and Börjesson Karl. “Exciton Delocalization Counteracts the Energy Gap: A New Pathway toward NIR-Emissive Dyes.” Journal of the American Chemical Society (2021).


MLA   Click to copy
Cravcenco, A., et al. “Exciton Delocalization Counteracts the Energy Gap: A New Pathway toward NIR-Emissive Dyes.” Journal of the American Chemical Society, 2021.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{a2021a,
  title = {Exciton Delocalization Counteracts the Energy Gap: A New Pathway toward NIR-Emissive Dyes},
  year = {2021},
  journal = {Journal of the American Chemical Society},
  author = {Cravcenco, A. and Yu, Yi-Xiang and Edhborg, Fredrik and Goebel, J. and Takács, Z. and Yang, Yizhou and Albinsson, B. and Börjesson, Karl}
}

Abstract

Exciton coupling between the transition dipole moments of ordered dyes in supramolecular assemblies, so-called J/H-aggregates, leads to shifted electronic transitions. This can lower the excited state energy, allowing for emission well into the near-infrared regime. However, as we show here, it is not only the excited state energy modifications that J-aggregates can provide. A bay-alkylated quaterrylene was synthesized, which was found to form J-aggregates in 1,1,2,2-tetrachloroethane. A combination of superradiance and a decreased nonradiative relaxation rate made the J-aggregate four times more emissive than the monomeric counterpart. A reduced nonradiative relaxation rate is a nonintuitive consequence following the 180 nm (3300 cm–1) red-shift of the J-aggregate in comparison to the monomeric absorption. However, the energy gap law, which is commonly invoked to rationalize increased nonradiative relaxation rates with increasing emission wavelength, also contains a reorganization energy term. The reorganization energy is highly suppressed in J-aggregates due to exciton delocalization, and the framework of the energy gap law could therefore reproduce our experimental observations. J-Aggregates can thus circumvent the common belief that lowering the excited state energies results in large nonradiative relaxation rates and are thus a pathway toward highly emissive organic dyes in the NIR regime.


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