2 resultados para Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer
em AMS Tesi di Laurea - Alm@DL - Università di Bologna
Resumo:
Ultrafast pump-probe spectroscopy is a conceptually simple and versatile tool for resolving photoinduced dynamics in molecular systems. Due to the fast development of new experimental setups, such as synchrotron light sources and X-ray free electron lasers (XFEL), new spectral windows are becoming accessible. On the one hand, these sources have enabled scientist to access faster and faster time scales and to reach unprecedent insights into dynamical properties of matter. On the other hand, the complementarity of well-developed and novel techniques allows to study the same physical process from different points of views, integrating the advantages and overcoming the limitations of each approach. In this context, it is highly desirable to reach a clear understanding of which type of spectroscopy is more suited to capture a certain facade of a given photo-induced process, that is, to establish a correlation between the process to be unraveled and the technique to be used. In this thesis, I will show how computational spectroscopy can be a tool to establish such a correlation. I will study a specific process, which is the ultrafast energy transfer in the nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide dimer (NADH). This process will be observed in different spectral windows (from UV-VIS to X-rays), accessing the ability of different spectroscopic techniques to unravel the system evolution by means of state-of-the-art theoretical models and methodologies. The comparison of different spectroscopic simulations will demonstrate their complementarity, eventually allowing to identify the type of spectroscopy that is best suited to resolve the ultrafast energy transfer.
Resumo:
Organic Light-Emitting Diodes (OLEDs) technology has matured over recent years, reaching the commercialization level and being used in various applications. The required efficiency can be achieved by transforming triplet excitons into singlet states via Reverse InterSystem Crossing (RISC), which a general mechanism called thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF). Two prototypical molecules in the field, 2CzBN and 4CzBN, Carbazole Benzonitrile (donor-acceptor) derivatives, possess similar energy gap between singlet and triplet (∆EST, a key parameter in the RISC rate), but different TADF performance. In this sense, other parameter must be considered to explain these different behaviors. In this work, we theoretically investigate 2CzBN and 4CzBN and address the problem of how flexible donor-acceptor (D-A) or donor-acceptor-donor (D-A-D) molecular architectures affect the nature of excited state, and the oscillator strength. Furthermore, we analyze the RISC rates as a function of the conformation of the carbazole side groups, considering the S0, S1, T1 and T2 states. The oscillator strength of 4CzBN is higher than of 2CzBN, which, in turn, is almost vanishing, resulting in only 4CzBN being a TADF active molecule. We also note the presence of a second triplet state T2 lower in energy than S1, and that the reorganization energies, associated to the RISC processes involving T1 and T2, are both important factor in differentiating the rates in 2CzBN and 4CzBN. However, the 4CzBN RISC rate from T2 to S1 is surprisingly high with respect to the one from T1 to S1, although, according to EL-Sayed rules, since T2 (CT/LE) is more similar to S1 (CT) than in 2CzBN (LE, CT), this transition should be less favored. These insights are important to understand the photophysics of the TADF process and to design novel TADF emitters based on the benzo-carbazole architecture.