Long-range interactions boost singlet exciton diffusion in nanofibers of $\pi$-extended polymer chains

12 July 2021, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Raising the distance covered by singlet excitons during their lifetimes to values maximizing light absorption (a few hundred nm) would solve the exciton diffusion bottleneck issue and lift the constraint for fine (~10 nm) phase segregation in bulk heterojunction organic solar cells. In that context, the recent report of highly ordered conjugated polymer nanofibers featuring singlet exciton diffusion length, $L_D$, in excess of 300 nm is both appealing and intriguing [X. Jin et al., Science 360, 897 (2018)]. Here, on the basis of non-adiabatic molecular dynamics simulations, we demonstrate that singlet exciton diffusion in poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) fibers is highly sensitive to the interplay between delocalization along the polymer chains and long-range interactions along the stacks. Remarkably, the diffusion coefficient is predicted to rocket by three orders of magnitude when going beyond nearest-neighbor intermolecular interactions in fibers of extended (30-mer) polymer chains and to be resilient to interchain energetic and positional disorders.

Keywords

exciton transport
surface hopping
polymer nanofiber

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Supplemental Materials for Long-range interactions boost singlet exciton diffusion in nanofibers of $\pi$- extended polymer chains
Description
(1) schematic presentation of the polymer nanofibers; (2) histogram of the time-dependent inverse participation ratio as a function of static disorder; (3) influence of dislocation defect on exciton diffusion; (4) comparison of MSD with gas-phase and screened excitonic couplings; (5) histogram of the number of accessed adiabatic states along trajectories; (6) time evolution of the active state and inverse participation ratio in P3HT stacks; (7) improvement of the exciton diffusion coefficient with non-local exciton-phonon couplings and (8) methodology.
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