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Linking Intermolecular Geometry and Spin Coupling of Excitons in Organic Semiconductors

ORAL · Invited

Abstract

The design and optimization of synthetic magnetic and optoelectronic materials requires precise chemical control of spin and electronic coupling. Here we focus on understandingthis structure-function relationship for light-harvesting applications of singlet fission: the production of two triplet excitons (each with spin S=1) following excitation of one singlet exciton (spin S=0). To quantitatively extract dipolar and exchange interactions between triplet excitons formed by singlet fission in a solid-state organic semiconductor, we have deployed broadband optically detected magnetic resonance [4], electron spin resonance [1,3], and magneto-optical spectroscopy [2]. Mapping the experimentally extracted spin parameters onto the molecular crystal structure provides a window into exciton localization and coupling in the molecular lattice. This mapping of spin properties to excited-state electronic structure is made possible by sustained excited-state spin polarization and coherence over microsecond timescales [1, 3]. These results --linking intermolecular geometry and spin interactions-- provide a key step toward chemically controlling intermolecular spin coupling for both optoelectronic applications and molecular quantum technologies.

Publication: [1] Weiss, L. R., et al. Nature Physics 13.2 (2017)<br>[2] Bayliss, S. L.*, Weiss, L.R.*, et al. PNAS 115.20 (2018)<br>[3] Bayliss, S. L.*, Weiss, L.R.*, et al. Physical Review X 10.2 (2020)<br>[4] Yunusova, K. M., et al. Physical Review Letters 125.9 (2020)

Presenters

  • Leah R Weiss

    University of Chicago, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

Authors

  • Leah R Weiss

    University of Chicago, Oak Ridge National Laboratory

  • Samuel L Bayliss

    University of Chicago; University of Glasgow, University of Chicago, University of Glasgow, University of Chicago

  • John E Anhtony

    University of Kentucky, University of Kentucky, Chemistry

  • Neil C Greenham

    Univ of Cambridge

  • Jan Behrends

    Berlin Joint Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Laboratory

  • Alexei D Chepelianskii

    Laboratoire de Physique des Solides, Université Paris-Sud, LPS, Universite Paris-Saclay, CNRS, UMR 8502, F-91405 Orsay, France

  • Robert Bittl

    Berlin Joint Electron Paramagnetic Resonance Laboratory