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Abstract
Molecular excitons play a central role in natural and artificial light harvesting, organic electronics, and nanoscale computing. The structure and dynamics of molecular excitons, critical to each application, are sensitively governed by molecular packing. Deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) templating is a powerful approach that enables controlled aggregation via sub-nanometer positioning of molecular dyes. However, finer sub-Angstrom control of dye packing is needed to tailor excitonic properties for specific applications. Here, we show that adding rotaxane rings to squaraine dyes templated with DNA promotes an elusive oblique packing arrangement with highly desirable optical properties. Specifically, dimers of these squaraine:rotaxanes exhibit an absorption spectrum with near-equal intensity excitonically split absorption bands. Theoretical analysis indicates that the transitions are mostly electronic in nature and only have similar intensities over a narrow range of packing angles. Compared with squaraine dimers, squaraine:rotaxane dimers also exhibit extended excited-state lifetimes and less structural heterogeneity. The approach proposed here may be generally useful for optimizing excitonic materials for a variety of applications ranging from solar energy conversion to quantum information science.
DNA templating is a useful strategy to control the positioning and aggregation of molecular dyes on a sub-nanometer scale, but sub-angstrom control is desirable for the precise tailoring of excitonic properties. Here, the authors show that templating squaraine dyes functionalized with rotaxane rings promotes an elusive oblique packing arrangement and extended excited-state lifetimes.
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1 Boise State University, Micron School of Materials Science & Engineering, Boise, USA (GRID:grid.184764.8) (ISNI:0000 0001 0670 228X)
2 SETA BioMedicals, Urbana, USA (GRID:grid.184764.8)
3 Boise State University, Micron School of Materials Science & Engineering, Boise, USA (GRID:grid.184764.8) (ISNI:0000 0001 0670 228X); Boise State University, Department of Chemistry & Biochemistry, Boise, USA (GRID:grid.184764.8) (ISNI:0000 0001 0670 228X)
4 Boise State University, Micron School of Materials Science & Engineering, Boise, USA (GRID:grid.184764.8) (ISNI:0000 0001 0670 228X); Boise State University, Department of Electrical & Computer Engineering, Boise, USA (GRID:grid.184764.8) (ISNI:0000 0001 0670 228X)