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Main Authors: Ajdari, Mohsen, Pappenberger, Ronja, Annweiler, Caja, Kaczun, Tobias, Mueller, Leon, Winkelmann, Larissa, Ahrens, Lukas, Bunz, Uwe H. F., Dreuw, Andreas, Tegeder, Petra
Format: Preprint
Published: 2024
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Online Access:https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.03971
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author Ajdari, Mohsen
Pappenberger, Ronja
Annweiler, Caja
Kaczun, Tobias
Mueller, Leon
Winkelmann, Larissa
Ahrens, Lukas
Bunz, Uwe H. F.
Dreuw, Andreas
Tegeder, Petra
author_facet Ajdari, Mohsen
Pappenberger, Ronja
Annweiler, Caja
Kaczun, Tobias
Mueller, Leon
Winkelmann, Larissa
Ahrens, Lukas
Bunz, Uwe H. F.
Dreuw, Andreas
Tegeder, Petra
contents Benzobisthiadiazoles (BBTs) are promising organic semiconductors for applications in field effect transistors and solar cells, since they possess a strong electron-accepting character. Thereby the electronic structure of organic/metal interfaces and within thin films is essential for the performance of organic electronic devices. Here, we study the structural and the electronic properties of two BBTs, with different core substitution pattern, a phenyl (BBT-Ph) and thiophene (BBT-Th) derivative adsorbed on Au(111) using vibrational and electronic high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy in combination with state-of-the-art quantum chemical calculations. In the mono- and multilayer both BBTs adopt a planar adsorption geometry with the molecular backbone as well as the phenyl and thiophene side groups are oriented parallel to the gold substrate. The energies of the lowest excited electronic singlet states and the first triplet state (T1) are determined. The optical gap is found to be 2.2 eV for BBT-Ph and 1.6 eV for BBT-Th. The energy of T1 is identified to be 1.2 eV in BBT-Ph and in the case of BBT-Th 0.7 eV. Thus, both the optical gap size as well as the T1 energy are drastically reduced in BBT-Th compared to BBT-Ph. Based on our quantum chemical calculations this is attributed to the electron-rich nature of the five-membered thiophene rings in conjunction with their preference for planar geometries. Variation of the substitution pattern in BBTs opens the opportunity for tailoring their electronic properties.
format Preprint
id arxiv_https___arxiv_org_abs_2401_03971
institution arXiv
publishDate 2024
record_format arxiv
spellingShingle Influence of Core Substitution on the Electronic Structure of Benzobisthiadiazoles
Ajdari, Mohsen
Pappenberger, Ronja
Annweiler, Caja
Kaczun, Tobias
Mueller, Leon
Winkelmann, Larissa
Ahrens, Lukas
Bunz, Uwe H. F.
Dreuw, Andreas
Tegeder, Petra
Materials Science
Benzobisthiadiazoles (BBTs) are promising organic semiconductors for applications in field effect transistors and solar cells, since they possess a strong electron-accepting character. Thereby the electronic structure of organic/metal interfaces and within thin films is essential for the performance of organic electronic devices. Here, we study the structural and the electronic properties of two BBTs, with different core substitution pattern, a phenyl (BBT-Ph) and thiophene (BBT-Th) derivative adsorbed on Au(111) using vibrational and electronic high-resolution electron energy loss spectroscopy in combination with state-of-the-art quantum chemical calculations. In the mono- and multilayer both BBTs adopt a planar adsorption geometry with the molecular backbone as well as the phenyl and thiophene side groups are oriented parallel to the gold substrate. The energies of the lowest excited electronic singlet states and the first triplet state (T1) are determined. The optical gap is found to be 2.2 eV for BBT-Ph and 1.6 eV for BBT-Th. The energy of T1 is identified to be 1.2 eV in BBT-Ph and in the case of BBT-Th 0.7 eV. Thus, both the optical gap size as well as the T1 energy are drastically reduced in BBT-Th compared to BBT-Ph. Based on our quantum chemical calculations this is attributed to the electron-rich nature of the five-membered thiophene rings in conjunction with their preference for planar geometries. Variation of the substitution pattern in BBTs opens the opportunity for tailoring their electronic properties.
title Influence of Core Substitution on the Electronic Structure of Benzobisthiadiazoles
topic Materials Science
url https://arxiv.org/abs/2401.03971