马库斯理论
离域电子
电荷(物理)
激子
半导体
电子转移
材料科学
光致发光
化学物理
光诱导电子转移
电子
产量(工程)
凝聚态物理
反应速率常数
化学
分子物理学
光电子学
物理
量子力学
物理化学
有机化学
动力学
冶金
作者
Joshua M. Carr,Taylor G. Allen,Bryon W. Larson,Iryna Davydenko,Raghunath R. Dasari,Stephen Barlow,Seth R. Marder,Obadiah G. Reid,Garry Rumbles
摘要
Understanding how Frenkel excitons efficiently split to form free-charges in low-dielectric constant organic semiconductors has proven challenging, with many different models proposed in recent years to explain this phenomenon. Here, we present evidence that a simple model invoking a modest amount of charge delocalization, a sum over the available microstates, and the Marcus rate constant for electron transfer can explain many seemingly contradictory phenomena reported in the literature. We use an electron-accepting fullerene host matrix dilutely sensitized with a series of electron donor molecules to test this hypothesis. The donor series enables us to tune the driving force for photoinduced electron transfer over a range of 0.7 eV, mapping out normal, optimal, and inverted regimes for free-charge generation efficiency, as measured by time-resolved microwave conductivity. However, the photoluminescence of the donor is rapidly quenched as the driving force increases, with no evidence for inverted behavior, nor the linear relationship between photoluminescence quenching and charge-generation efficiency one would expect in the absence of additional competing loss pathways. This behavior is self-consistently explained by competitive formation of bound charge-transfer states and long-range or delocalized free-charge states, where both rate constants are described by the Marcus rate equation. Moreover, the model predicts a suppression of the inverted regime for high-concentration blends and efficient ultrafast free-charge generation, providing a mechanistic explanation for why Marcus-inverted-behavior is rarely observed in device studies.
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