Wednesday Colloquia
Multi-exciton Generation in Organic Molecules via Singlet Exciton Fission
by Prof. Jyotishman Dasgupta (TIFR Mumbai)
Wednesday, March 1, 2023
from
to
(Asia/Kolkata)
at AG-66 and via ZOOM webinar ( Zoom link: https://zoom.us/j/97963259354?pwd=ZFZsa2xqWGJSZW5pUjZPNkNqeGlEZz09 )
at AG-66 and via ZOOM webinar ( Zoom link: https://zoom.us/j/97963259354?pwd=ZFZsa2xqWGJSZW5pUjZPNkNqeGlEZz09 )
Meeting ID: 979 6325 9354
Pass code: 04072020
Description |
Optimizing light harvesting has been a critical part for developing efficient photon-conversion technologies. Nature provides a blue-print through the light-harvesting machinery based on precise aggregate arrangements of multiple chromophores hosted on protein frameworks.[1] However all of these light harvesting pigment-protein complexes operate under the “one-exciton per one-photon” absorption paradigm. Recently it has been recognized that artificial molecular aggregates with a specific energy structure of the molecular triplet states can show propensity for multi-exciton generation through a process called singlet exciton fission.[2,3] In this colloquium, I will provide an overview of how singlet fission works, and discuss the potential rules for making useful photon-conversion devices based on some of our recent mechanistic work in this rapidly emerging area.[4, 5, 6, 7] References: 1. Lokstein, H.; Renger, G.; and Götze, J. P.; Molecules 2021, 26, 3378 2. Smith, M. B.; Michl, J.; Chemical Review 2010, 110, 6891 3. Rao, A.; Friend, R. H., Nature Reviews Materials 2017, 2, 1 4. Krishnapriya, K.C. and Roy, P. et al.; Nature Communications. 2019, 10, 33 5. Kundu, A.; Dasgupta, J.; Journal Physical Chemistry Letters 2021, 12, 5, 1468 6. Maity, N., Kim, W., Panjwani, N.A. et al.; Nature Communications, 2022, 13, 5244 7. Bansal, D. and Kundu, A. et al.; Chemical Science 2022, 13, 11506 |