Publications by authors named "Francesco Di Maiolo"

Article Synopsis
  • The study highlights the discovery of singlet-triplet (ST) inversion in certain triangle-shaped boron carbon nitrides, challenging Hund's first rule caused by strong electron-electron interactions.
  • This ST inversion has significant implications for improving triplet harvesting in organic LEDs, making it a noteworthy advancement in the field.
  • The research utilizes the Pariser-Parr-Pople model combined with advanced calculations to show that the ST inversion is mainly influenced by the arrangement of electron-donor and electron-acceptor groups around the molecular edge, rather than the shape of the triangles themselves.
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Thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) is a hot research topic in view of its impressive applications in a wide variety of fields from organic LEDs to photodynamic therapy and metal-free photocatalysis. TADF is a rare and fragile phenomenon that requires a delicate equilibrium between tiny singlet-triplet gaps, sizable spin-orbit couplings, conformational flexibility and a balanced contribution of charge transfer and local excited states. To make the picture more complex, this precarious equilibrium is non-trivially affected by the interaction of the TADF dye with its local environment.

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The inversion of the lowest singlet and triplet excited states, observed in several triangle-shaped organic molecules containing conjugated carbon and nitrogen atoms, is an astonishing result that implies the breakdown of Hund's rule. The phenomenon attracted interest for its potential toward triplet harvesting in organic LEDs. On a more fundamental vein, the singlet-triplet (ST) inversion sheds new light on the role of electron correlations in the excited-state landscape of π-conjugated molecules.

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The design of efficient organic electronic devices, including OLEDs, OPVs, luminescent solar concentrators, , relies on the optimization of relevant materials, often constituted by an active (functional) dye embedded in a matrix. Understanding solid state solvation (SSS), how the properties of the active dye are affected by the matrix, is therefore an issue of fundamental and technological relevance. Here an extensive experimental and theoretical investigation is presented shedding light on this, somewhat controversial, topic.

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The phenomenon of excited-state symmetry breaking is often observed in multipolar molecular systems, significantly affecting their photophysical and charge separation behavior. As a result of this phenomenon, the electronic excitation is partially localized in one of the molecular branches. However, the intrinsic structural and electronic factors that regulate excited-state symmetry breaking in multibranched systems have hardly been investigated.

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We report on first applications of the Multi-Layer Gaussian-based Multi-Configuration Time-Dependent Hartree (ML-GMCTDH) method [Römer et al., J. Chem.

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We report on quantum dynamical simulations of exciton diffusion in an oligo(para-phenylene vinylene) chain segment with 20 repeat units (OPV-20) at finite temperature, complementary to our recent study of the same system at T = 0 K [R. Binder and I. Burghardt, J.

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An antiadiabatic approach is proposed to model how the refractive index of the surrounding medium affects optical spectra of molecular systems in condensed phases. The approach solves some of the issues affecting current implementations of continuum solvation models and more generally of effective models where a classical description is adopted for the molecular environment.

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Resonance energy transfer (RET) is a complex phenomenon where energy is transferred between two nonequivalent molecules. In the Förster picture, that applies to the weak coupling regime, RET occurs from the energy donor molecule in the relaxed excited state toward the acceptor, in an energy-conserving process. However, energy dissipation is crucial for a more general picture of RET that also applies to the strong coupling regime.

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Organic ferroelectric materials are currently a hot research topic, with mixed stack charge transfer crystals playing a prominent role with their large, electronic-in-origin polarization and the possibility to tune the transition temperature down to the quantum limit and/or to drive the ferroelectric transition via an optical stimulus. By contrast, and in spite of an impressive research effort, organic ferromagnets are rare and characterized by very low transition temperatures. Coexisting magnetic and electric orders in multiferroics offer the possibility to control magnetic (electric) properties by an applied electric (magnetic) field with impressive technological potential.

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Essential-state models efficiently describe linear and nonlinear spectral properties of different families of charge-transfer chromophores. Here, the essential-state machinery is applied to the calculation of the early-stage dynamics after ultrafast (coherent) excitation of polar and quadrupolar chromophores. The fully non-adiabatic treatment of coupled electronic and vibrational motion allows for a reliable description of the dynamics of these intriguing systems.

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