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Dive into the research topics where Erik Busby is active.

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Featured researches published by Erik Busby.


Nature Materials | 2015

A design strategy for intramolecular singlet fission mediated by charge-transfer states in donor-acceptor organic materials.

Erik Busby; Jianlong Xia; Qin Wu; Jonathan Z. Low; Rui Song; John R. Miller; X.-Y. Zhu; Luis M. Campos

The ability to advance our understanding of multiple exciton generation (MEG) in organic materials has been restricted by the limited number of materials capable of singlet fission. A particular challenge is the development of materials that undergo efficient intramolecular fission, such that local order and strong nearest-neighbour coupling is no longer a design constraint. Here we address these challenges by demonstrating that strong intrachain donor-acceptor interactions are a key design feature for organic materials capable of intramolecular singlet fission. By conjugating strong-acceptor and strong-donor building blocks, small molecules and polymers with charge-transfer states that mediate population transfer between singlet excitons and triplet excitons are synthesized. Using transient optical techniques, we show that triplet populations can be generated with yields up to 170%. These guidelines are widely applicable to similar families of polymers and small molecules, and can lead to the development of new fission-capable materials with tunable electronic structure, as well as a deeper fundamental understanding of MEG.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Multiphonon Relaxation Slows Singlet Fission in Crystalline Hexacene

Erik Busby; Timothy C. Berkelbach; Bharat Kumar; Alexey Chernikov; Yu Zhong; Htay Hlaing; X.-Y. Zhu; Tony F. Heinz; Mark S. Hybertsen; David R. Reichman; Colin Nuckolls; Omer Yaffe

Singlet fission, the conversion of a singlet excitation into two triplet excitations, is a viable route to improved solar-cell efficiency. Despite active efforts to understand the singlet fission mechanism, which would aid in the rational design of new materials, a comprehensive understanding of mechanistic principles is still lacking. Here, we present the first study of singlet fission in crystalline hexacene which, together with tetracene and pentacene, enables the elucidation of mechanistic trends. We characterize the static and transient optical absorption and combine our findings with a theoretical analysis of the relevant electronic couplings and rates. We find a singlet fission time scale of 530 fs, which is orders of magnitude faster than tetracene (10-100 ps) but significantly slower than pentacene (80-110 fs). We interpret this increased time scale as a multiphonon relaxation effect originating from a large exothermicity and present a microscopic theory that quantitatively reproduces the rates in the acene family.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2013

Packing Dependent Electronic Coupling in Single Poly(3-hexylthiophene) H- and J-Aggregate Nanofibers

Thomas P. Martin; Adam J. Wise; Erik Busby; Jian Gao; John D. Roehling; Michael J. Ford; Delmar S. Larsen; Adam J. Moulé; John K. Grey

Nanofibers (NFs) of the prototype conjugated polymer, poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT), displaying H- and J-aggregate character are studied using temperature- and pressure-dependent photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy. Single J-aggregate NF spectra show a decrease of the 0-0/0-1 vibronic intensity ratio from ~2.0 at 300 K to ~1.3 at 4 K. Temperature-dependent PL line shape parameters (i.e., 0-0 energies and 0-0/0-1 intensity ratios) undergo an abrupt change in the range of ~110-130 K suggesting a change in NF chain packing. Pressure-dependent PL lifetimes also show increased contributions from an instrument-limited decay component which is attributed to greater torsional disorder of the P3HT backbone upon decreasing NF volume. It is proposed that the P3HT alkyl side groups change their packing arrangement from a type I to type II configuration causing a decrease in J-aggregate character (lower intrachain order) in both temperature- and pressure-dependent PL spectra. Chain packing dependent exciton and polaron relaxation and recombination dynamics in NF aggregates are next studied using transient absorption spectroscopy (TAS). TAS data reveal faster polaron recombination dynamics in H-type P3HT NFs indicative of interchain delocalization whereas J-type NFs exhibit delayed recombination suggesting that polarons (in addition to excitons) are more delocalized along individual chains. Both time-resolved and steady-state spectra confirm that excitons and polarons in J-type NFs are predominantly intrachain in nature that can acquire interchain character with small structural (chain packing) perturbations.


Light Manipulating Organic Materials and Devices | 2014

Quantifying singlet fission in novel organic materials using nonlinear optics

Erik Busby; Jianlong Xia; Omer Yaffe; Bharat Kumar; Timothy C. Berkelbach; Qin Wu; John R. Miller; Colin Nuckolls; X.-Y. Zhu; David R. Reichman; Luis M. Campos

Singlet fission is a form of multiple exciton generation in which two triplet excitons are produced from the decay of a photoexcited singlet exciton. In a small number of organic materials, most notably pentacene, this conversion process has been shown to occur with unity quantum yield on sub-ps timescales. However, a poorly understood mechanism for fission along with strict energy and geometry requirements have so far limited the observation of this process to a few classes of organic materials, with only a subset of these (most notably the polyacenes) showing both efficient fission and long-lived triplets. Here, we utilize novel organic materials to investigate how the efficiency of the fission process depends on the coupling and the energetic driving force between chromophores in both intra- and intermolecular singlet fission materials. We demonstrate how the triplet yield can be accurately quantified using a combination of traditional transient spectroscopies and recently developed excited state saturable absorption techniques. These results allow us to gain mechanistic insight into the fission process and suggest general strategies for generating new materials that can undergo efficient fission.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2011

Sequestering High-Energy Electrons to Facilitate Photocatalytic Hydrogen Generation in CdSe/CdS Nanocrystals

Arthur Thibert; F. Andrew Frame; Erik Busby; Michael A. Holmes; Frank E. Osterloh; Delmar S. Larsen


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2011

Excited-State Self-Trapping and Ground-State Relaxation Dynamics in Poly(3-hexylthiophene) Resolved with Broadband Pump–Dump–Probe Spectroscopy

Erik Busby; Elizabeth C. Carroll; Erin M. Chinn; Lilian Chang; Adam J. Moulé; Delmar S. Larsen


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

Red States versus Blue States in Colloidal Silicon Nanocrystals: Exciton Sequestration into Low-Density Traps

Jack Fuzell; Arthur Thibert; Tonya M. Atkins; Mita Dasog; Erik Busby; Jonathan G. C. Veinot; Susan M. Kauzlarich; Delmar S. Larsen


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

Fast Singlet Exciton Decay in Push–Pull Molecules Containing Oxidized Thiophenes

Erik Busby; Jianlong Xia; Jonathan Z. Low; Qin Wu; Jessica Hoy; Luis M. Campos


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2011

Primary Photodynamics of Water-Solubilized Two-Dimensional CdSe Nanoribbons

Arthur Thibert; F. Andrew Frame; Erik Busby; Delmar S. Larsen


Chemical Physics Letters | 2011

Acceptor dependent polaron recombination dynamics in poly 3-hexyl thiophene: Fullerene composite films

Erik Busby; Christopher W. Rochester; Adam J. Moulé; Delmar S. Larsen

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Arthur Thibert

University of California

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Adam J. Moulé

University of California

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Ali M. Jawaid

University of Illinois at Chicago

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