(496d) Tight-Binding Model Accurately Describes Frontier Orbitals of Conjugated Oligomer Acceptors for Organic Solar Cells | AIChE

(496d) Tight-Binding Model Accurately Describes Frontier Orbitals of Conjugated Oligomer Acceptors for Organic Solar Cells

Authors 

Jindal, V. - Presenter, Penn State University
Milner, S. T., The Pennsylvania State University
Agarwala, P., Penn State
Janik, M., The Pennsylvania State University
Conjugated organic small molecules are designed as acceptor materials for organic photovoltaic [OPV] cells. OPV optoelectronic properties, including light absorption, intramolecular and intermolecular charge transfer, depends on the properties of frontier molecular orbitals of these conjugated molecules. Recently, we have shown that tight-binding models can efficiently describe a broad range of optoelectronic properties for copolymers. Tight-binding parameters derived from density functional theory [DFT] calculations on constituent homopolymers reasonably predict copolymer valence and conduction bands. Here, we extend this approach to heterogeneous oligomers designed for non-polymeric acceptors including IDTBR, which gives high-efficiency OPV in combination with poly(3-hexylthiophene) [P3HT], a widely used donor. IDTBR consists of 7 aromatic moieties: an indacenodithiophene [IDT] core, flanked by benzothiadiazole and 3-ethylrhodadine on either side. We show that the tight-binding parameters for copolymers and dimers of the constituent moieties can be used to define the IDTBR tight-binding model, which reasonably predicts the energy and wavefunction of multiple frontier orbitals. As an example of the usefulness of the tight-binding approach, we calculate the absorption spectrum of IDTBR melt by averaging over possible conformational disorder, which would be challenging using DFT directly.