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Dive into the research topics where Stefan C. J. Meskers is active.

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Featured researches published by Stefan C. J. Meskers.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Compositional and electric field dependence of the dissociation of charge transfer excitons in alternating polyfluorene copolymer/fullerene blends

Dirk Veldman; Özlem İpek; Stefan C. J. Meskers; Jörgen Sweelssen; Marc M. Koetse; Sjoerd C. Veenstra; Jan Kroon; Ss Svetlana van Bavel; Joachim Loos; René A. J. Janssen

The electro-optical properties of thin films of electron donor-acceptor blends of a fluorene copolymer (PF10TBT) and a fullerene derivative (PCBM) were studied. Transmission electron microscopy shows that in these films nanocrystalline PCBM clusters are formed at high PCBM content. For all concentrations, a charge transfer (CT) transition is observed with absorption spectroscopy, photoluminescence, and electroluminescence. The CT emission is used as a probe to investigate the dissociation of CT excited states at the donor-acceptor interface in photovoltaic devices, as a function of an applied external electric field and PCBM concentration. We find that the maximum of the CT emission shifts to lower energy and decreases in intensity with higher PCBM content. We explain the red shift of the emission and the lowering of the open-circuit voltage (V(OC)) of photovoltaic devices prepared from these blends with the higher relative permittivity of PCBM (epsilon(r) = 4.0) compared to that of the polymer (epsilon(r) = 3.4), stabilizing the energy (E(CT)) of CT states and of the free charge carriers in blends with higher PCBM concentration. We show that the CT state has a short decay time (tau = ca. 4 ns) that is reduced by the application of an external electric field or with increasing PCBM content. The field-induced quenching can be explained quantitatively with the Onsager-Braun model for the dissociation of the CT states when including a high electron mobility in nanocrystalline PCBM clusters. Furthermore, photoinduced absorption spectroscopy shows that increasing the PCBM concentration reduces the yield of neutral triplet excitons forming via electron-hole recombination, and increases the lifetime of radical cations. The presence of nanocrystalline domains with high local carrier mobility of at least one of the two components in an organic heterojunction may explain efficient dissociation of CT states into free charge carriers.


Advanced Materials | 2000

Circularly Polarized Electroluminescence from Liquid‐Crystalline Chiral Polyfluorenes

Masao Oda; Heinz-Georg Nothofer; Günter Lieser; Ullrich Scherf; Stefan C. J. Meskers; Dieter Neher

Circularly polarized electroluminescence (CPEL) has potential application in optical data storage and processing. It was recently discovered that CPEL could be generated from chiral-substituted, conjugated polymers. These authors have synthesized a range of polyfluorenes (e.g., see Figure) that form liquid crystals and emit bluish light with a significant (200 times greater than in the first report) circularly polarized component


Advanced Materials | 2010

Improved Film Morphology Reduces Charge Carrier Recombination into the Triplet Excited State in a Small Bandgap Polymer-Fullerene Photovoltaic Cell

Daniele Di Nuzzo; Aranzazu Aguirre; Munazza Shahid; Veronique S. Gevaerts; Stefan C. J. Meskers; René A. J. Janssen

The use of diiodooctane as processing additive for construction of PCPDTBT:PCBM solar cells results in a profound change in photophysical behavior of this blend. In the improved morphology obtained with the additive, recombination of charge carriers to the lowest triplet excited state is suppressed. This contributes to the boost in solar power conversion efficiency induced by the use of the processing agent.


Applied Physics Letters | 2007

Reproducible resistive switching in nonvolatile organic memories

Frank Verbakel; Stefan C. J. Meskers; René A. J. Janssen; Henrique L. Gomes; Michael Cölle; Michael Büchel; Dago M. de Leeuw

Resistive switching in nonvolatile, two terminal organic memories can be due to the presence of a native oxide layer at an aluminum electrode. Reproducible solid state memories can be realized by deliberately adding a thin sputtered Al2O3 layer to nominal electron-only, hole-only, and bipolar organic diodes. Before memory operation, the devices have to be formed at an electric field of 109V∕m, corresponding to soft breakdown of Al2O3. After forming, the structures show pronounced negative differential resistance and the local maximum in the current scales with the thickness of the oxide layer. The polymer acts as a current limiting series resistance.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Triplet formation involving a polar transition state in a well-defined intramolecular perylenediimide dimeric aggregate

Dirk Veldman; Stéphanie M. A. Chopin; Stefan C. J. Meskers; Michiel M. Groeneveld; René M. Williams; René A. J. Janssen

A cofacially stacked perylenediimide (PDI) dimer with a xanthene linker was studied under a variety of conditions (solvent, temperature) and serves as a model for the molecular interactions occurring in solid films. Intrinsically, the PDI units have a fluorescence quantum yield (Phi F) close to unity, but Phi F is lowered by a factor of 6-50 at room temperature when two PDI moieties are held in a cofacial arrangement, while the decay time of the most emissive state is increased significantly (tau F = 27 ns in toluene) compared to a monomeric PDI molecule (tau F = 4 ns). Fluorescence measurements show a strong solvent and temperature dependence of the characteristics of the emissive excited state. In a glassy matrix of toluene (TOL) or 2-methyltetrahydrofuran (2-MeTHF), Phi F is high, and the decay time is long (tau F = approximately 50 ns). At higher temperature, both Phi F and tau F are reduced. Interestingly, at room temperature, Phi F and tau F are also reduced with increasing solvent polarity, revealing the presence of a polar transition state. Photoinduced absorption of the stacked molecules from the picosecond to the microsecond time scale shows that after photoexcitation reorganization occurs in the first nanoseconds, followed by intersystem crossing (ISC), producing the triplet excited state. Using singlet oxygen ( (1)Delta g) luminescence as a probe, a triplet quantum yield (Phi T) greater than 50% was obtained in air-saturated 2-Me-THF. Triplet formation is exceptional for PDI chromophores, and the enhanced ISC is explained by a decay involving a highly polar transition state.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Optical Properties of Oligothiophene Substituted Diketopyrrolopyrrole Derivatives in the Solid Phase: Joint J- and H-Type Aggregation

Mindaugas Kirkus; Linjun Wang; Sébastien Mothy; David Beljonne; Jérôme Cornil; René A. J. Janssen; Stefan C. J. Meskers

Photophysical properties of diketopyrrolopyrrole derivatives substituted with oligothiophenes are investigated. All compounds are found to be fluorescent both in solution and in the solid phase. At low temperature in the solid, fluorescence originates from excimer-like excited states. Comparison of absorption and fluorescence excitation spectra taken under matrix isolated conditions and on solid films show the presence of both J- and H-type absorption bands in the solid phase. Quantum-chemical calculations, including exciton-phonon coupling to account for deviations from the Born-Oppenheimer approximation, are performed to simulate the band shape of the lowest absorption band in the molecular solid. The joint presence of J- and H-bands is explained by the presence of two molecules in the unit cell. The Davydov splitting is substantial for molecules with linear alkyl substituents on the nitrogen atom (on the order of 0.2 eV) but can be reduced to almost zero by introducing branching at the β-carbon of the alkyl side chain.


Advanced Materials | 1998

Investigation of Exciton Coupling in Oligothiophenes by Circular Dichroism Spectroscopy

Bea M. W. Langeveld-Voss; David Beljonne; Zhigang Shuai; René A. J. Janssen; Stefan C. J. Meskers; E. W. Meijer; Jean-Luc Brédas

The solid-state photophysical properties of semiconducting polymers result from the interplay between the intrinsic features of the polymer chains and interchain interactions. Exciton coupling, which in principle can be estimated from circular dichroism (CD) spectra, is one of the major interchain interactions affecting the optical properties of semiconducting polymers. Here the authors present a combined experimental and theoretical investigation of the chiroptical properties of oligothiophenes. The results confirm that the CD spectrum provides an independent estimate of the exciton coupling.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Helical aromatic oligoamide foldamers as organizational scaffolds for photoinduced charge transfer

Martin Wolffs; Nicolas Delsuc; Dirk Veldman; Nguyễn Vân Anh; René M. Williams; Stefan C. J. Meskers; René A. J. Janssen; Ivan Huc; Albertus P. H. J. Schenning

Here we report the synthesis and characterization of four quinoline-derived foldamers with increasing oligomeric length; dimer O2P, tetramer O4P, pentamer O5P, and nonamer O9P functionalized with on one end an oligo(p-phenylene vinylene) (OPV) and on the other end a perylene bisimide (PB) chromophore. (1)H NMR confirms the formation of the expected folded structures in both toluene and chloroform solution. The structural predictability and rigidity of the oligomeric series enabled us to investigate the effect of a helical bridge and chromophore position on the photoinduced processes in the electron OPV-PB donor-acceptor pair in chloroform and toluene. The helical properties of the bridge ensured that the chromophore separation distance through space is different from the separation distance through the bridge. For all foldamer-solvent combinations studied, excitation of either OPV or PB results in nearly quantitative quenching of the fluorescence indicating a fast charge separation reaction between the OPV and PB. Femtosecond photoinduced absorption measurements confirmed the fast formation of a charge-separated state. The recombination reaction involves a combination of direct decay to the ground state and the formation of an intermediate triplet state, with their balance depending on the foldamer-solvent combination. Molecular orbital calculations rationalize the fast photoinduced charge separation, by revealing that the bridging foldamer mediates the charge transfer from donor to acceptor via the superexchange mechanism. Remarkably low attenuation factors (beta(CS) approximately 10(-2) A(-1)) were obtained using either through space or through bridge separation distance. However, in these calculations only three of the four foldamers show the expected linear behavior between the logarithm of the charge separation rate constant and the distance between the chromophores. The combined results show when a helical bridge is separating the charge transfer couple, hampering the usefulness of a uniform description of the charge-separation phenomena.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2002

Orientational effect on the photophysical properties of quaterthiophene - C60 dyads

Paul A. van Hal; Edwin H. A. Beckers; Stefan C. J. Meskers; René A. J. Janssen; Bruno Jousselme; Philippe Blanchard; Jean Roncali

Two quaterthiophene-[60]fullerene dyads in which C60 is singly (4TsC) or doubly (4TdC) connected to the inner beta-position of the terminal thiophene rings have been synthesized. The electronic properties of these donor-acceptor compounds were analyzed by UV/Vis spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry, and their photophysical properties in solution and in the solid state by (time-resolved) photoluminescence (PL) and photoinduced absorption (PIA) spectroscopy. Both the flexible and geometrically constrained 4TsC and 4TdC dyads exhibit photoinduced charge transfer from the quaterthiophene to the fullerene in toluene and o-dichlorobenzene (ODCB). In toluene, charge transfer occurs in both dyads by an indirect mechanism, the first step of which is a singlet-energy transfer from the 4T(S1) state to the C60(S1) state. In the more polar ODCB, direct electron transfer from 4T(S1) competes with energy transfer, and both direct and indirect charge transfers are observed. The geometrical fixation of the donor and acceptor chromophores in 4TdC results in rate constants for energy and electron transfer that are more than an order of magnitude larger than those of the flexible 4TsC system. For both dyads, charge recombination is extremely fast, as inferred from picosecond-resolved temporal evolution of the excited state absorption of the 4T.+ radical cation both in toluene and ODCB.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Enhanced Intersystem Crossing via a High Energy Charge Transfer State in a Perylenediimide−Perylenemonoimide Dyad

Dirk Veldman; Stéphanie M. A. Chopin; Stefan C. J. Meskers; René A. J. Janssen

The electronic relaxation processes of a photoexcited linear perylenediimide-perylenemonoimide (PDI-PMI) acceptor-donor dyad were studied. PDI-PMI serves as a model compound for donor-acceptor systems in photovoltaic devices and has been designed to have a high-energy PDI (-*)-PMI (+*) charge transfer (CT) state. Our study focuses on the minimal Gibbs free energy (Delta G ET) required to achieve quantitative CT and on establishing the role of charge recombination to a triplet state. We used time-resolved photoluminescence and picosecond photoinduced absorption (PIA) to investigate excited singlet (S 1) and CT states and complemented these experiments with singlet oxygen ( (1)Delta g) luminescence and PIA measurements on longer timescales to study the population of triplet excited states (T 1). In an apolar solvent like cyclohexene (CHX), photoinduced electron transfer does not occur, but in more polar solvents such as toluene (TOL) and chlorobenzene (CB), photoexcitation is followed by a fast electron transfer, populating the PDI (-*)-PMI (+*) CT state. We extract rate constants for electron transfer (ET; S 1-->CT), back electron transfer (BET; S 1<--CT), and charge recombination (CR) to lower-energy states (CT-->S 0 and CT-->T 1). Temperature-dependent measurements yield the barriers for the transfer reactions. For ET and BET, these correspond to predictions from Marcus-Jortner theory and show that efficient, near quantitative electron transfer ( k ET/ k BET >or= 100) can be obtained when Delta G ET approximately -120 meV. With respect to triplet state formation, we find a relatively low triplet quantum yield (Phi T < 25%) in CHX but much higher values (Phi T = 30-98%) in TOL and CB. We identify the PDI (-*)-PMI (+*) state as a precursor to the T 1 state. Recombination to T 1, rather than to the ground-state S 0, is required to rationalize the experimental barrier for CR. Finally, we discuss the relevance of these results for electron donor-acceptor films in photovoltaic devices.

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René A. J. Janssen

Eindhoven University of Technology

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E. W. Meijer

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Albertus P. H. J. Schenning

Eindhoven University of Technology

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Asal Kiazadeh

University of the Algarve

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Benjamin F. Bory

Eindhoven University of Technology

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