Donor–Acceptor–Donor Modular Small Organic Molecules Based on the Naphthalene Diimide Acceptor Unit for Solution-Processable Photovoltaic Devices

2014 ◽  
Vol 43 (9) ◽  
pp. 3243-3254 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hemlata Patil ◽  
Akhil Gupta ◽  
Ante Bilic ◽  
Sam Leslie Jackson ◽  
Kay Latham ◽  
...  
RSC Advances ◽  
2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (130) ◽  
pp. 107566-107574 ◽  
Author(s):  
Xin Liu ◽  
Yuan Xie ◽  
Xinyi Cai ◽  
Yunchuan Li ◽  
Hongbin Wu ◽  
...  

Four solution-processable acceptor–donor–acceptor structured organic molecules with isoindigo as terminal acceptor units and different aromatic rigid planar cores as donor units were designed and synthesized as the acceptor materials in organic solar cells (OSCs).


2019 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 137-142 ◽  
Author(s):  
K. Gawlińska-Nęcek ◽  
Z. Starowicz ◽  
D. Tavgeniene ◽  
G. Krucaite ◽  
S. Grigalevicius ◽  
...  

MRS Advances ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (61) ◽  
pp. 3171-3184
Author(s):  
Oscar González-Antonio ◽  
Rebeca Yépez ◽  
María Magdalena Vázquez-Alvarado ◽  
Blas Flores-Pérez ◽  
Norberto Farfán ◽  
...  

AbstractA series of highly attainable desymmetrized heterocyclic compounds with Donor-Acceptor-Donor-Acceptor-X (D-A-D-X) architectures were synthesized. The structures, where X corresponds to a heteroaromatic portion (pyridine, ferrocene, thiadiazolopyridine), were designed through computational analysis. Molecular geometries for all compounds were studied and parameters of charge transfer were computed in order to analyse the behaviour in each architecture. Spectroscopic properties (maximum absorption wavelengths, extinction coefficients and HOMO-LUMO gaps) were predicted and measured experimentally. UV-Vis absorption profiles and values of HOMO-LUMO optical gaps (in the vicinity of 2.0 eV), together with the computational results, are properties that position the obtained systems, as potential candidates for developing efficient photovoltaic materials based on synthetically accessible small organic molecules.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Madan R Biradar ◽  
Akshay Vinod Salkar ◽  
Pranay Pradeep Morajkar ◽  
Sheshnath V Bhosale ◽  
Sidhanath V Bhosale

Redox-active small organic molecules have recently attracted an immense interest as electrode materials for supercapacitor device applications. Such redox-active molecular architectural manipulation offers an exciting opportunity to modify the charge...


Author(s):  
Joshua Horton ◽  
Alice Allen ◽  
Leela Dodda ◽  
Daniel Cole

<div><div><div><p>Modern molecular mechanics force fields are widely used for modelling the dynamics and interactions of small organic molecules using libraries of transferable force field parameters. For molecules outside the training set, parameters may be missing or inaccurate, and in these cases, it may be preferable to derive molecule-specific parameters. Here we present an intuitive parameter derivation toolkit, QUBEKit (QUantum mechanical BEspoke Kit), which enables the automated generation of system-specific small molecule force field parameters directly from quantum mechanics. QUBEKit is written in python and combines the latest QM parameter derivation methodologies with a novel method for deriving the positions and charges of off-center virtual sites. As a proof of concept, we have re-derived a complete set of parameters for 109 small organic molecules, and assessed the accuracy by comparing computed liquid properties with experiment. QUBEKit gives highly competitive results when compared to standard transferable force fields, with mean unsigned errors of 0.024 g/cm3, 0.79 kcal/mol and 1.17 kcal/mol for the liquid density, heat of vaporization and free energy of hydration respectively. This indicates that the derived parameters are suitable for molecular modelling applications, including computer-aided drug design.</p></div></div></div>


Author(s):  
Joshua Horton ◽  
Alice Allen ◽  
Leela Dodda ◽  
Daniel Cole

<div><div><div><p>Modern molecular mechanics force fields are widely used for modelling the dynamics and interactions of small organic molecules using libraries of transferable force field parameters. For molecules outside the training set, parameters may be missing or inaccurate, and in these cases, it may be preferable to derive molecule-specific parameters. Here we present an intuitive parameter derivation toolkit, QUBEKit (QUantum mechanical BEspoke Kit), which enables the automated generation of system-specific small molecule force field parameters directly from quantum mechanics. QUBEKit is written in python and combines the latest QM parameter derivation methodologies with a novel method for deriving the positions and charges of off-center virtual sites. As a proof of concept, we have re-derived a complete set of parameters for 109 small organic molecules, and assessed the accuracy by comparing computed liquid properties with experiment. QUBEKit gives highly competitive results when compared to standard transferable force fields, with mean unsigned errors of 0.024 g/cm3, 0.79 kcal/mol and 1.17 kcal/mol for the liquid density, heat of vaporization and free energy of hydration respectively. This indicates that the derived parameters are suitable for molecular modelling applications, including computer-aided drug design.</p></div></div></div>


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