Ultrafast Vibronic Dynamics of Singlet Fission: From Molecular Movies to Wavefunction Projection

 · Invited

Abstract

The complex dynamics of ultrafast photoinduced reactions such as singlet fission are governed by their evolution along vibronically coupled potential energy surfaces. Here, I will decribe our recent work on both understading this coupling and manipulating it using ultrafast optical spectrscopy. Combining excited-state time-domain Raman spectroscopy and tree-tensor network state simulations, we construct the full 108-atom molecular movie of ultrafast singlet fission in a pentacene dimer, explicitly treating 252 vibrational modes on 5 electronic states. Our combined experimental and theoretical approach reveals the atomic- scale singlet fission mechanism and can be generalized to other ultrafast photoinduced reactions in complex systems. In other singlet fission systems, polydiacetylene and carotenoids, we experimentally demonstrate that S1 state (21Ag-) is a superposition state with strong contributions from spin-entangled pairs of triplet excitons (1(TT)). We further show that optical manipulation of the S1 (21Ag-) wavefunction using triplet absorption transitions allows selective projection of the 1(TT) component into a manifold of spatially separated triplet-pairs with lifetimes enhanced by up to one order of magnitude and whose yield is strongly dependent on the level of inter- chromophore coupling.

*This work was supported by the Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council, UK (Grant Numbers EP/M025330/1, EP/M01083X/1, EP/L015552/1 and EP/M006360/1) and the Winton Programme for the Physics of Sustainability. J.W. acknowledges financial support from Singapore MOE Tier 3 Programme (MOE2014-T3-1-004). T.W. acknowl- edges the Marie Curie Intra European Fellowship (PIEF-GA-2013-623652) within the 7th European Community Framework Programme. C.S. acknowledges financial support by the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851.

Presenters

  • Akshay Rao

    • Department of Physics, University of Cambridge
    • University of Cambridge, Cavendish Laboratory
    • Univ of Cambridge

Authors

  • Raj Pandya

    • University of Cambridge, Cavendish Laboratory
  • Christoph Schnedermann

    • University of Cambridge, Cavendish Laboratory
  • antonis Alvertis

    • University of Cambridge, Cavendish Laboratory
  • Akshay Rao

    • Department of Physics, University of Cambridge
    • University of Cambridge, Cavendish Laboratory
    • Univ of Cambridge