First-Principles Studies of Substituent Effects on Squaraine Dyes

German Barcenas, Austin Biaggne, Olga A. Mass, Christopher K. Wilson, Olena M. Obukhova, Olga S. Kolosova, Anatoliy L. Tatarets, Ewald Terpetschnig, Ryan D. Pensack, Jeunghoon Lee, William B. Knowlton, Bernard Yurke, Lan Li

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

28 Scopus citations
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Abstract

Dye molecules that absorb light in the visible region are key components in many applications, including organic photovoltaics, biological fluorescent labeling, super-resolution microscopy, and energy transport. One family of dyes, known as squaraines, has received considerable attention recently due to their favorable electronic and photophysical properties. In addition, these dyes have a strong propensity for aggregation, which results in emergent materials properties, such as exciton delocalization. This will be of benefit in charge separation and energy transport along with fundamental studies in quantum information. Given the high structural tunability of squaraine dyes, it is possible that exciton delocalization could be tailored by modifying the substituents attached to the π-conjugated network. To date, limited theoretical studies have explored the role of substituent effects on the electronic and photophysical properties of squaraines in the context of DNA-templated dye aggregates and resultant excitonic behavior. We usedab initiotheoretical methods to determine the effects of substituents on the electronic and photophysical properties for a series of nine different squaraine dyes. Solvation free energy was also investigated as an insight into changes in hydrophobic behavior from substituents. The role of molecular symmetry on these properties was also exploredviaconformation and substitution. We found that substituent effects are correlated with the empirical Hammett constant, which demonstrates their electron donating or electron withdrawing strength. Electron withdrawing groups were found to impact solvation free energy, transition dipole moment, static dipole difference, and absorbance more than electron donating groups. All substituents showed a redshift in absorption for the squaraine dye. In addition, solvation free energy increases with Hammett constant. This work represents a first step toward establishing design rules for dyes with desired properties for excitonic applications.

Original languageAmerican English
Pages (from-to)19029-19040
Number of pages12
JournalRSC Advances
Volume11
Issue number31
Early online date26 May 2021
DOIs
StateE-pub ahead of print - 26 May 2021

EGS Disciplines

  • Materials Science and Engineering

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