We examine in detail the impact of passivating ligands (i.e., amines, phosphines, phosphine oxides and pyridines) on the electronic and optical spectra of Cd 33 Se 33 quantum dots (QDs) using density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) quantum-chemical methodologies. Most ligand orbitals are found deep inside in the valence and conduction bands of the QD, with pyridine being an exception by introducing new states close to the conduction band edge. Importantly, all ligands contribute states which are highly delocalized over both the QD surface and ligands, forming hybridized orbitals rather than ligand-localized trap states. In contrast, the states close to the band gap are delocalized over the QD atoms only and define the lower energy absorption spectra. The random detachment of one of ligands from the QD surface results in the appearance of a highly localized unoccupied state inside the energy gap of the QD. Such changes in the electronic structure are correlated with the respective QD-ligand binding energy and steric ligand-ligand interactions. Polar solvent significantly reduces both effects leading to delocalization and stabilization of the surface states. Thus, trap and surface states are substantially eliminated by the solvent. Polar solvent also blue-shifts (e.g., 0.3-0.4 eV in acetonitrile) the calculated absorption spectra. This shift increases with an increase of the dielectric constant of the solvent. We also found that the approximate single-particle KohnSham (KS) approach is adequate for calculating the absorption spectra of the ligated QDs. Besides a systematic blue-shift, the KS spectra are in very good agreement with their respective counterparts calculated with the more accurate TDDFT method.
Semiconducting polymer devices have seen tremendous progress in development of material and device designs, while device efficiencies have made substantial gains. Still, the effect of material morphology on the optoelectronic properties of semiconducting polymers is not completely understood even though these materials make up the active device layer. In this study we use computational methods to simulate different poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) morphologies, predict their emission spectra, and compare them to experimentally observed emission spectra for P3HT nanoparticles. We use published X-ray diffraction data on P3HT polymorphs to build the molecular models of nanodomains that differ in the side-chain packing. The atomic and electronic structures of both nanodomains are studied with the force field, Hartree–Fock, CIS, and density functional theory methods. The results confirm the coexistence of type I and II nanodomains, where the shift of the backbones in the same stack is determined by the differences in side-chain packing. Upon excitation, the polymer chains in type II domain are free to slide to their optimal arrangement in the stack, whereas in type I domain this sliding is hindered by the steric repulsion of the side chains and the chains are essentially constrained to keep the ground state geometry. These nanodomains, therefore, differ in their emission spectra: type I emission has a single 0–0 vibronic band, while type II demonstrates pronounced vibronic progression. In agreement with Frenkel exciton theory, splitting of the excited state depends on the longitudinal shift of the π-systems. However, we find that due to the constraints arising from P3HT being confined in nanosized particles, the type I nanodomain increasingly appears as an additional emitter that exhibits J-aggregate character. As a result, a pronounced vibronic structure appears as PCBM blending ratios increase, as opposed to the changes in emission profile due to a different degree of disorder present in weakly coupled H-aggregates. These findings are distinct from those made for bulk P3HT materials.
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