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The objective of this study was to synthesize multichromophoric donor-acceptor systems with non-halogenated red (RO) naphthalenediimides (NDIs) attached along p-oligophenyl (POP) and oligophenylethynyl (OPE) scaffolds, and to evaluate their usefulness for zipper assembly of artificial photosystems. Compared to halogenated red NDIs (RCl, RBr), the HOMO of RO is 0.2 eV higher and the HOMO/LUMO gap 0.1 eV smaller, the latter introducing a shade of pink. Consistent with higher HOMO levels, RO zippers generate less photocurrent than RBr zippers in their respective action spectra. RO zippers are less sensitive to topological mismatch than RBr zippers and thus more robust and broadly applicable. Transient absorption measurements reveal efficient electron transfer from excited OPE donors to RO acceptors and less efficient hole injection from excited RO donors into OPE acceptors. Both processes demonstrate compatibility with OMARG-SHJ photosystems (supramolecular n/p-heterojunctions with oriented multicolored antiparallel redox gradients). Decreasing hole transfer with decreasing HOMO energy differences further demonstrates that SHJ-type hole injection disappears gradually (rather than abruptly). Losses in photonic energy during this process can thus be minimized by optoelectronic finetuning, but eventual gains in open circuit voltages risk coming with complementary losses in short circuit current. |
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Matching matters when building supramolecular n/p-heterojunction photosystems on solid supports that excel with efficient photocurrent generation, important critical thickness, smooth surfaces, and flawless responsiveness to functional probes for the existence of operational intra- and interlayer recognition motifs. |
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The objective with synthetic multifunctional nanoarchitecture is to create large suprastructures with interesting functions. For this purpose, lipid bilayer membranes or conducting surfaces have been used as platforms and rigid-rod molecules as shape-persistent scaffolds. Examples for functions obtained by this approach include pores that can act as multicomponent sensors in complex matrices or rigid-rod π-stack architecture for artificial photosynthesis and photovoltaics. |