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The present thesis describes the development of a strategy to create discrete finite-sized supramolecular stacks of merocyanine dyes. Thus, bichromophoric stacks of two identical or different chromophores could be realized by folding of bis(merocyanine) dyes and their optical properties were discussed in terms of exciton theory. Quantum chemical calculations revealed strong exciton coupling between the chromophores within the homo- and hetero-π-stacks and the increase of the J-band of the hetero-dimers with increasing energy difference between the excited states of the chromophores could be attributed not only to the different magnitudes of transition dipole moments of the chromophores but also to the increased localization of the excitation in the respective exciton state. Furthermore, careful selection of the length of the spacer unit that defines the interplanar distance between the tethered chromophores directed the self-assembly of the respective bis(merocyanines) into dimers, trimers and tetramers comprising large, structurally precise π-stacks of four, six or eight merocyanine chromophores. It could be demonstrated that the structure of such large supramolecular architectures can be adequately elucidated by commonly accessible analysis tools, in particular NMR techniques in combination with UV/vis measurements and mass spectrometry. Supported by TDDFT calculations, the absorption spectra of the herein investigated aggregates could be explained and a relationship between the absorption properties and the number of stacking chromophores could be established based on exciton theory.
In der vorliegenden Doktorarbeit konnte gezeigt werden, dass eine starke Exzitonenkopplung nicht nur zwischen gleichen Chromophoren, sondern auch zwischen Chromophoren mit unterschiedlichen Energien der angeregten Zustände möglich ist. Diese beeinflusst maßgeblich die Absorptionsspektren der Heterostapel bestehend aus Merocyanin- bzw. Perylenbisimidfarbstoffen und deutet außerdem auf einen kohärenten Energientransfer zwischen den Chromophoren hin. Weiterhin wurden Bis(merocyanin)-C60-Konjugate synthetisiert, die in unpolaren Lösungsmitteln selbst assemblieren und auf diese Weise wohldefinierte supramolekulare p/n-Heterogrenzflächen gebildet werden. An diesen wurde mithilfe von femtosekundenaufgelöster transienter Absorptionsspektroskopie der photoinduzierte Elektronentransfer untersucht, was ein wichtiger Schritt bei der Erzeugung von Ladungsträgern in organischen Solarzellen darstellt.
Analog zu den auf hochgeordneten Farbstoffarchitekturen in den biologischen Photosyntheseapparaten basierenden Energiekonversionssystemen sollte die exakte Einstellung zwischenmolekularer Wechselwirkungen auch in künstlichen Halbleitern eine entscheidende Rolle für die Weiterentwicklung organischer Elektronikmaterialien spielen. Für eine derartige, präzise Steuerung der nanoskaligen Anordnung in organischen Materialien erscheinen Merocyaninfarbstoffe wegen ihrer hochgerichteten, dipolaren Aggregation äußerst aussichtsreich. In diesem Zusammenhang war das Ziel der vorliegenden Arbeit die Ausnutzung funktionaler, stark selbstorganisierender Merocyanine, um eine gezielte Beeinflussung der Morphologie in der aktiven Schicht von BHJ-Solarzellen zu erreichen. Hierzu sollte zunächst eine umfangreiche Serie komplexer Merocyanine synthetisiert und vollständig charakterisiert werden. Im Folgenden wurde angestrebt, die optischen und elektrochemischen Eigenschaften der molekular gelösten Farbstoffe zu bestimmen und für ausgewählte, geeignete Strukturen das Selbstorganisationsverhalten im Detail zu studieren. Zuletzt sollte durch eine sorgfältige Optimierung der Prozessierungsbedingungen ein Transfer der in Lösung gefundenen, supramolekularen Strukturen in den Blend lösungsprozessierter BHJ-Solarzellen erreicht werden. Die organischen Elektronikbauteile wurden dabei im Arbeitskreis von Prof. Dr. Klaus Meerholz (Universität Köln) gefertigt und charakterisiert.
Zusammenfassend zeichnet die vorliegende Arbeit ein umfassendes Bild von der Synthese funktionaler Merocyanine, dem Studium ihrer molekularen und Selbstorganisationseigenschaften sowie ihrer Anwendung als p-Halbleitermaterialien in organischen Solarzellen. Der komplexe Molekülaufbau der dargestellten Farbstoffe führte dabei zur Ausbildung verschiedener Farbstofforganisate, deren Struktur sowohl in Lösung als auch teilweise im Festkörper aufgeklärt werden konnte. Die erfolgreiche Implementierung von H-aggregierten Spezies der Verbindung 67b in die aktive Schicht organischer BHJ-Solarzellen resultierte in der Bildung effizienter Perkolationspfade für Exzitonen und freie Ladungsträger, wodurch diese Bauteile merklich höhere Stromdichten generieren konnten und gegenüber Zellen ohne H-Spezies über 20 % gesteigerte Effizienz aufwiesen. Diese Befunde verifizieren die postulierte Hypothese, dass eine gezielte Einstellung der zwischenmolekularen Wechselwirkungen bei organischen Halbleitern zu einer Optimierung der Funktionalität organischer Elektronikmaterialien beitragen kann.
In this study, a double-donor concept is used to improve the performance of thermally evaporated merocyanine(s)/C60 bulk heterojunction (BHJ) solar cells. It is shown that the co-evaporation of two merocyanine dyes with absorption bands at ~ 500 nm (SW dye) and ~ 650 nm (LW dye), respectively, together with C60 fullerene results in an improvement of open-circuit voltage (VOC), short-circuit current (JSC) as well as total power conversion efficiency (PCE) compared to the best single-donor cell. The enhancement of JSC is attributed to a higher photon harvesting efficiency of the mixed-donor devices due to a better spectral coverage.
Merocyanine Dyes as Organic Semiconductors for Vacuum-processed Solar Cell and Transistor Devices
(2015)
The present thesis comprises the synthesis of new functional merocyanine dyes, the study of their electro-optical properties as well as solid state packing and their application as p-type semiconductor materials in transistor and solar cell devices. The absorption properties of the obtained compounds could be modified by variation of the donor unit, the introduction of electron-withdrawing substituents in the acceptor unit or elongation of the polymethine chain. For a particular dye, the absorption band could be shifted by more than 160 nm by increasing the solvent polarity due to a conformational switch between a merocyanine-like and a cyanine-like structure. Single crystal analyses revealed that the studied dyes tend to pack either in an antiparallel fashion forming dimers with no overall dipole moment or in a staircase-like pattern where the dipole moments point to the same direction and are only balanced by another staircase oriented in the opposite direction (stair dimer). With respect to application as semiconductor materials, the latter packing arrangement resulted most favorable for charge carrier mobility. We concluded that this packing motif is preserved in the solar cell devices, where the selenium-containing dye afforded the highest performance of this series for an optimized planar-mixed heterojunction solar cell (6.2 %).
The technology of organic photovoltaics offers the possibility of low-cost devices due to easy fabrication procedures and low material consumption and at the same time high flexibility concerning the applied substrates or design features such as the color palette. Owing to these benefits, this research field is highly active, being reflected by the continuously rising number of publications. Chapter 1 gives an extensive overview of a part of these reports, namely the field of solution-processed BHJ organic solar cells using small molecules as electron-donating materials. In the early years of this research area (2006-2008), well known hole transporting materials such as triphenylamine based chromophores, oligothiophenes and polyaromatic hydrocarbons were applied. However, many of these dyes lacked absorption at longer wavelengths and were therefore limited in their light harvesting qualities. Later, chromophores based on low band gap systems consisting of electron-donating and electron-accepting units showing internal charge transfer overcame this handicap. Today, donor-substituted diketopyrrolopyrroles (D-A-D chromophores), squaraines (D-A-D chromophores) and acceptor substituted oligothiophenes (A-D-A chromophores) are among the most promising dyes for small molecule based organic solar cells with PCEs of 4-5%. This work is based on the findings of the groups of Würthner and Meerholz, which tested merocyanine dyes for the first time in organic BHJ solar cells.4 According to the Bässler theory85, the high dipolarity of these dyes should hamper the charge transport, but the obtained first results with PCE of 1.7% proved the potenital of this class of dyes for this application. Merocyanine dyes offer the advantages of facile synthesis and purification, high tinctorial strength and monodispersity. Additionally, the electronic structure of the dyes, namely the absorption as well as the electrochemical properties, can be adjusted by using the right combination of donor and acceptor units. For these reasons, this class of dye is highly interesting for the application in organic solar cells. It was the aim of the thesis to build more knowledge about the potential and limitations of merocyanines in BHJ photovoltaic devices. By screening a variety of donor and acceptor groups a comprehensive data set both for the molecular materials as well as for the respective solar devices was generated and analyzed. As one focus, the arrangement of the chromophores in the solid state was investigated to gain insight about the packing in the solar cells and its relevance for the performance of the latter. To do so, X-ray single crystal analyses were performed for selected molecules. By means of correlations between molecular properties and the characteristics of the corresponding solar cells, several design rules to generate efficient chromophores for organic photovoltaics were developed. The different donor and acceptor moieties applied in this work are depicted in the following ...
Nucleic acids are not only one of the most important classes of macromolecules in biochemistry but also a promising platform for the defined arrangement of chromophores. Thanks to their precise organization by directional polar and hydrophobic interactions, oligonucleotides can be exploited as suitable templates for multichromophore assemblies with predictable properties. To expand the toolbox of emissive, base pairing nucleobase analogs several barbituric acid merocyanine (BAM) chromophores with tunable spectroscopic properties were synthesized and incorporated into RNA, DNA and glycol nucleic acid (GNA) oligonucleotides. A multitude of duplexes containing up to ten BAM chromophores was obtained and analysis by spectroscopic methods revealed the presence of dipolarly coupled merocyanine aggregates with properties
strongly dependent on the chromophore orientation toward each other and the backbone conformation. These characteristics were exploited for various applications such as FRET pair formation and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) experiments. The observed formation of higher-order aggregates implies future applications of these new oligonucleotide-chromophore systems as light-harvesting DNA nanomaterials. Besides oligonucleotide templated covalent assembly of chromophores also non-covalent nucleic acid-chromophore complexes are a broad field of research. Among these, fluorogenic RNA aptamers are of special interest with the most versatile ones based on derivatives of the GFP chromophore hydroxybenzylidene imidazolone (HBI). Therefore, new HBI-derived chromophores with an expanded conjugated system and an additional exocyclic amino group for an enhanced binding affinity were synthesized and analyzed in complex with the Chili aptamer. Among these, structurally new fluorogenes with strong fluorescence activation upon binding to Chili were identified which are promising for further derivatization and application as color-switching sensor devices for example.
This thesis established the fabrication of organic solar cells of DA dye donors and fullerene acceptors under ambient conditions in our laboratory, however, with reduced power conversion efficiencies compared to inert conditions. It was shown that moisture had the strongest impact on the stability and reproducibility of the solar cells. Therefore, utilization of robust materials, inverted device architectures and fast fabrication/characterization are recommended if processing takes place in air. Furthermore, the dyad concept was successfully explored in merocyanine dye-fullerene dyads and power conversion efficiencies of up to 1.14 % and 1.59 % were measured under ambient and inert conditions, respectively. It was determined that the major drawback in comparison to comparable BHJ devices was the inability of the dyad molecules to undergo phase separation. Finally, two series of small molecules were designed in order to obtain electron transport materials, using the acceptor-core-acceptor motive. By variation of the acceptor units especially the LUMO levels could be lowered effectively. Investigation of the compounds in organic thin film transistors helped to identify promising molecules with electron transport properties. Electron transport mobilities of up to 7.3 × 10−2 cm2 V−1 s−1 (ADA2b) and 1.39 × 10−2 cm2 V−1 s−1 (AπA1b) were measured in air for the ADA and AπA dyes, respectively. Investigation of selected molecules in organic solar cells proved that these molecules work as active layer components, even though power conversion efficiencies cannot compete with fullerene based devices yet. Thus, this thesis shows new possibilities that might help to develop and design small molecules as substitutes for fullerene acceptors.
The present thesis demonstrates the potential of dipolar aggregation of merocyanine dyes as novel directional and specific supramolecular binding motif for the creation of more elaborate supramolecular architectures beyond simple dimers. Furthermore, the self-assembly studies into bis(merocyanine) nanorods gave new insights into the kinetics of morphogenesis in supramolecular aggregates.