The dynamics and mobility of excitons in J-aggregates of perylene bisimides are investigated by transient absorption spectroscopy with a time resolution of 50 fs. The transient spectra are compatible with an exciton delocalization length of two monomers and indicate that vibrational and configurational relaxation processes are not relevant for the spectroscopic properties of the aggregates. Increasing the pump pulse energy and in that way the initial exciton density results in an accelerated signal decay and pronounced exciton-exciton annihilation dynamics. Modeling the data by assuming a diffusive exciton motion reveals that the excitons cannot migrate freely in all three directions of space but their mobility is restricted to one dimension. The observed anisotropy supports this picture and points against direct Förster-transfer-mediated annihilation between the excitons. A diffusion constant of 1.29 nm(2)/ps is deduced from the fitting procedure that corresponds to a maximal exciton diffusion length of 96 nm for the measured exciton lifetime of 3.6 ns. The findings indicate that J-aggregates of perylene bisimides are promising building blocks to facilitate directed energy transport in optoelectronic organic devices or artificial light-harvesting systems.
The exciton dynamics in microcrystalline pentacene films is investigated by transient absorption measurements with 30 fs time resolution. It is found that the emission from photoexcited Frenkel excitons decays within 70 fs due to the ultrafast formation of an excitonic species with a strongly reduced transition dipole to the ground state and an absorption dipole in the plane of the film. We propose that an excimer exciton is formed and stabilized by changes of the local crystal structure. The subsequent dynamics is dominated by diffusion controlled annihilation and trapping.
Perylene bisimides (PBIs) are excellent dyes and versatile building blocks for supramolecular structures. Only recently have PBIs been shown to depict absorption characteristics of J-aggregates. We apply electronic structure calculations and femtosecond pump-probe spectroscopy to the monomeric, bay-substituted building-block of a PBI aggregate in dichloromethane to investigate its electronically excited states in order to provide the ingredients for the description of excitons in the aggregates and their annihilation processes. The PBI S(1)←S(0) absorption spectrum and the S(1)→S(0) emission spectrum have been assigned based on time-dependent Density Functional Theory calculations for the geometry-optimized electronic ground state and excited state structures in the gas phase. The monomeric absorption spectrum contains a strong transition at 580 nm and a broad shoulder between 575-500 nm, both features are attributed to a vibrational progression with an effective vibrational mode of 1415 cm(-1) whose major contributing vibrational normal modes are breathing modes of the perylene body. The effective vibrational mode of the emission spectrum is characterized by a frequency of 1369 cm(-1), whose major contributing vibrational normal modes are characterized by perylene and phenol (bay-substituent) CH bendings. The S(n)←S(1) excited state absorption spectrum is assigned based on Multi-Reference Configuration Interaction methodology. Here, we identify three transitions which give rise to two broad experimental features, one being located between 500 and 600 nm and the other one ranging from 650 to 750 nm.
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