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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Laser spectroscopic and kinetic investigations of metal-centred transients in homogeneous and microheterogeneous environments

Coates, Colin George January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
2

Femtosecond spectroscopy of conjugated polymers

Harvey, Ewan James January 1995 (has links)
No description available.
3

Fluorescence studies of polymer behaviour in solution

Swanson, Linda January 1989 (has links)
No description available.
4

Fluorescence properties of diphenylpolyenes in solution

Ferguson, A. J. January 1990 (has links)
No description available.
5

Engineering of Photophysical Properties in Halide Perovskites: From Nano to Bulk for Optoelectronic Applications

Dursun, Ibrahim 20 May 2019 (has links)
Halide perovskites have attracted the attention of a broad segment of the optoelectronics field, owing to their outstanding optical and electrical properties; simple low-temperature solution processing; low-cost raw materials; and tunable bandgaps. The main objective of this dissertation is engineering the materials’ properties of halide perovskites – their crystallinity, composition, and dimensionality – in order to understand the fundamental photophysical processes leading to their extraordinary behavior and to translate this understanding into optoelectronic applications. This dissertation is divided into two parts: the first focuses primarily on halide perovskites as a photonic source from an emission perspective, whereas the second is devoted to fundamental investigation of emergent photophysical concepts in halide perovskite materials including photon recycling and hot carriers. In the first part of this dissertation, we studied the synthesis and characterization of Cs-Pb-Br-based perovskite-related single crystals to elucidate the origin of the materials’ emission properties. After that, we presented perovskite nanocrystals (NCs) as a color converter in solid state lighting and visible light communication. Perovskites NCs’ converted white light (with a high color rendering index of 89 and a color correlated temperature of 3236 K) exhibits an extraordinary modulation bandwidth of 491 MHz, and data transmission rate of 2 Gbit/s. In the second part of this dissertation, we developed a facile synthesis method for perovskite microwires and demonstrate efficient photon recycling in those microwires with conclusive spectroscopic evidence. Subsequently, we investigated hot charge carriers in halide perovskites solar cells by a combination of laser spectroscopy and density functional modelling. Furthermore, we presented that hot holes were extracted at the device interface between the perovskite absorber and a hole transport layer. The findings and methodologies described in this dissertation represent a significant advance for utilizing the optical properties of halide perovskites, bring new fundamental photophysical insights to the field of halide perovskites, and provide a new powerful approach for designing the interface of perovskite solar cells to efficiently extract the hot charge carriers.
6

Photophysics of Conjugated Polymers

Dykstra, Tieneke Emily 31 July 2008 (has links)
Poly (para-phenylenevinylene) (PPV), and its derivatives such as poly [2-methoxy, 5-(2'-ethyl-hexoxy)-1,4-phenylene vinylene] (MEH-PPV), are typical conjugated polymers. In order to implement conjugated polymers into processable electronics technologies, we must first understand their complex photophysical properties as their efficiencies depend on the balance between exciton recombination and charge carrier formation. The inherent complexities of these materials arise from entanglement of the pi-electron system with disorder and nuclear motions of the polymer backbone. This disorder breaks the polymer chain into conformational subunits which can couple, giving rise to a set of delocalized states formed by Coulombic interactions between proximate subunits. Characteristics of PPVs include high quantum yields, non-mirror image absorption and fluorescence line shapes, and large apparent Stokes' shifts. These properties are discussed in the context of the relationships between polymer conformation, electronic structure, coupling, disorder and polymer photophysics. These important influences are often manifest in the dynamics of what happens after photoexcitation. In this work, we present 3-pulse photon echo peak shift (3PEPS) studies of conjugated polymers in both solution and film. To elucidate timescales characteristic of relaxation processes, we have simulated the 3PEPS data simultaneously with absorption and fluorescence, observing a rapid localization of the exciton in the initial ~ 20 fs. Additional contributions to the decay of the peakshift are discussed. We also present transient anisotropy data for PPV polymers and oligomers which is compared to dynamics simulation for isolated chains of PPVs. This work demonstrates the influence of microscopic structure on ultrafast dynamics. We show that relaxation between exciton states can lead to rapid depolarization of the anisotropy, even though the spatial extent of exciton migration may be small. Generally, the connection between conformation and electronic structure is a theme throughout this thesis.
7

Photophysics of Conjugated Polymers

Dykstra, Tieneke Emily 31 July 2008 (has links)
Poly (para-phenylenevinylene) (PPV), and its derivatives such as poly [2-methoxy, 5-(2'-ethyl-hexoxy)-1,4-phenylene vinylene] (MEH-PPV), are typical conjugated polymers. In order to implement conjugated polymers into processable electronics technologies, we must first understand their complex photophysical properties as their efficiencies depend on the balance between exciton recombination and charge carrier formation. The inherent complexities of these materials arise from entanglement of the pi-electron system with disorder and nuclear motions of the polymer backbone. This disorder breaks the polymer chain into conformational subunits which can couple, giving rise to a set of delocalized states formed by Coulombic interactions between proximate subunits. Characteristics of PPVs include high quantum yields, non-mirror image absorption and fluorescence line shapes, and large apparent Stokes' shifts. These properties are discussed in the context of the relationships between polymer conformation, electronic structure, coupling, disorder and polymer photophysics. These important influences are often manifest in the dynamics of what happens after photoexcitation. In this work, we present 3-pulse photon echo peak shift (3PEPS) studies of conjugated polymers in both solution and film. To elucidate timescales characteristic of relaxation processes, we have simulated the 3PEPS data simultaneously with absorption and fluorescence, observing a rapid localization of the exciton in the initial ~ 20 fs. Additional contributions to the decay of the peakshift are discussed. We also present transient anisotropy data for PPV polymers and oligomers which is compared to dynamics simulation for isolated chains of PPVs. This work demonstrates the influence of microscopic structure on ultrafast dynamics. We show that relaxation between exciton states can lead to rapid depolarization of the anisotropy, even though the spatial extent of exciton migration may be small. Generally, the connection between conformation and electronic structure is a theme throughout this thesis.
8

Photophysical Properties of Anthracenic Metal Organic Frameworks

Hay, Jennifer Marie 13 November 2014 (has links)
Luminescent metal organic frameworks (MOFs) are promising new materials with applications as sensors, photocatalysts, and other luminescent devices. Although MOFs retain the chemical and physical properties of their constituents, the properties of the MOF are often altered from those of its building blocks, making rational design and synthesis difficult. Anthracene is a polyaromatic hydrocarbon whose photophysical properties have been found to be easily tuned through structural modifications. The tunability of anthracene makes it an ideal candidate for use in luminescent devices, such as photoprobes and organic light emitting diodes. MOFs designed with π conjugated molecules like anthracene ligands possess similar photophysical properties such as absorption and fluorescence in the UV and visible spectrum. In hopes of better understanding how the photophysical properties of the organic ligand is altered upon incorporation into a MOF, the spectroscopic properties of anthracenedicarboxylic acids were studied before and after integration into zinc based MOFs. Steady state and time resolved measurements were performed on three anthracenedicarboxylic acids: 9,10-anthracenedicarboxylic acid, 2,6-anthracendicarboxylic acid, and 1,4-anthracenedicarboxylic acid. The position of the carboxylic acid groups on anthracene was found to effect the position and structure of the absorption and emission spectra. The difference in the spectra is attributed to the perturbation by the acid groups on certain electronic transitions with dipole moments across two of the three axes of anthracene. The position of the acid groups had different effects on the fluorescence quantum yields and lifetimes of the three anthracenic acids studied. Two of the linkers were synthesized into MOFs through a solvothermal reaction with zinc nitrate, to form PCN-13, from 9,10-anthracenedicarboxylic acid, and [Zn(C₁₆H₈O₄)(H₂O)]<sub>n</sub>, from 2,6-anthracenedicarboxylic acid. The luminescent properties of the two MOFs were studied and compared to those of the free based linker. Incorporation of the luminescent anthracenedicarboxylic acids into Zn based MOFs were found to either increase or decrease the luminescent properties of the ligands. / Master of Science
9

Photophysics of linear and star-shaped oligofluorenes and their application in lasers

Montgomery, Neil A. January 2013 (has links)
This thesis presents a study of the photophysical properties of a number of fluorene molecules used for organic semiconductor lasers. These results are then combined with lasing results to assess what the important properties in an organic semiconductor laser material are. Photophysical measurements were performed on a family of oligofluorenes; results show a redshift in the peak absorption and emission wavelengths with increasing length. There is also an increase in the molar extinction coefficient and photoluminescence quantum yields of the molecules. Transition dipole moments also increase with length, but fluorescence scales slower than absorption due to self-trapping occurring at longer molecular lengths. This study was then expanded to two families of star-shaped molecules with fluorene arms and differing cores. These molecules have three arms connected to either a central benzene unit or a larger truxene core. These molecules show an increase in PLQY and roughly three times higher molar extinction coefficients than comparable linear oligofluorenes. The star-shaped molecules PLQY and transition dipole moments are both greater than their linear oligofluorene counterparts. Energy transfer was then studied in the truxene-cored molecules, which showed that the symmetry of the molecule was broken due to interactions with the solvent. Energy transfer was observed on two timescales; a fast 500 fs process which is attributed to a localisation onto a single arm to emit, and a 3-10 ps second decay component, and was assigned to resonant energy transfer between the arms. Both decays were found to be wavelength dependent. Lasing results were then obtained for the benzene cored molecules. It was found that star-shaped molecules present improved lasing characteristics with lower ASE and lasing thresholds. These results were compared with those obtained for truxene-cored molecules whose rigid core provides them with better lasing and ASE characteristics.
10

Analysis methods for single molecule fluorescence spectroscopy

Gryte, Kristofer January 2012 (has links)
This thesis describes signal analysis methods for single-molecule fluorescence data. The primary factor motivating method development is the need to distinguish single-molecule FRET fluctuations due to conformational dynamics from fluctuations due to distance-independent FRET changes. Single-molecule Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) promises a distinct advantage compared to alternative biochemical methods in its potential to relate biomolecular structure to function. Standard measurements assume that the mean transfer efficiency between two fluorescent probes, a donor and an acceptor, corresponds to the mean donor-acceptor distance, thus providing structural information. Accordingly, measurement analysis assumes that mean transfer efficiency fluctuations entail mean donor-acceptor distance fluctuations. Detecting such fluctuations is important in resolving molecular dynamics, as molecular function often necessitates structural changes. A problem arises, however, in that factors other than donor-acceptor distance changes may induce mean transfer efficiency fluctuations. We refer to these factors as distance-independent FRET changes. We present analysis methods to detect distance-independent photophysical dynamics and to determine their correlation with distance-dependent FRET dynamics. First, we review a theory of photon statistics and show how we can use the theory to detect FRET fluctuations. Second, we extend the theory to alternating laser excitation (ALEx) measurements and demonstrate how fluorophore stoichiometry, a measure of fluorophore brightness, reports on distance-independent photophysical dynamics. Next, we provide a measure to determine the extent to which stoichiometry fluctuations account for FRET dynamics. Finally, we use a framework similar to the preceding along with recent advances in the theory of total internal reflection fluorescence (TIRF) microscopy FRET measurements to detect TIRF FRET fluctuations which occur on a timescale faster than the measurement temporal resolution. We validate our methods with simulations and demonstrate their utility in delineating RNA polymerase open complex conformational dynamics.

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