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Dive into the research topics where Yoann Olivier is active.

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Featured researches published by Yoann Olivier.


Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011

The nature of singlet excitons in oligoacene molecular crystals

H. Yamagata; Joseph E. Norton; E. Hontz; Yoann Olivier; David Beljonne; Jean-Luc Brédas; R. Silbey; Francis C. Spano

A theory for polarized absorption in crystalline oligoacenes is presented, which includes Frenkel exciton coupling, the coupling between Frenkel and charge-transfer (CT) excitons, and the coupling of all neutral and ionic excited states to the dominant ring-breathing vibrational mode. For tetracene, spectra calculated using all Frenkel couplings among the five lowest energy molecular singlet states predict a Davydov splitting (DS) of the lowest energy (0-0) vibronic band of only -32 cm(-1), far smaller than the measured value of 631 cm(-1) and of the wrong sign-a negative sign indicating that the polarizations of the lower and upper Davydov components are reversed from experiment. Inclusion of Frenkel-CT coupling dramatically improves the agreement with experiment, yielding a 0-0 DS of 601 cm(-1) and a nearly quantitative reproduction of the relative spectral intensities of the 0-n vibronic components. Our analysis also shows that CT mixing increases with the size of the oligoacenes. We discuss the implications of these results on exciton dissociation and transport.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2013

Free radical scavenging by natural polyphenols: atom versus electron transfer.

Florent Di Meo; Vincent Lemaur; Jérôme Cornil; Roberto Lazzaroni; Jean-Luc Duroux; Yoann Olivier; Patrick Trouillas

Polyphenols (synthetically modified or directly provided by human diet) scavenge free radicals by H-atom transfer and may thus decrease noxious effects due to oxidative stress. Free radical scavenging by polyphenols has been widely theoretically studied from the thermodynamic point of view whereas the kinetic point of view has been much less addressed. The present study describes kinetic-based structure-activity relationship for quercetin. This compound is very characteristic of the wide flavonoid subclass of polyphenols. H-atom transfer is a mechanism based on either atom or electron transfer. This is analyzed here by quantum chemical calculations, which support the knowledge acquired from experimental studies. The competition between the different processes is discussed in terms of the nature of the prereaction complexes, the pH, the formation of activated-deprotonated forms, and the atom- and electron-transfer efficiency. The role of the catechol moiety and the 3-OH group of quercetin as scavengers of different types of free radicals (CH3OO(•), CH3O(•), (•)OH, and (•)CH2OH) is rationalized. Identifying the exact mechanism and accurately evaluating kinetics is of fundamental importance to understand antioxidant behavior in physiological environments.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Maximizing Singlet Fission by Intermolecular Packing.

Linjun Wang; Yoann Olivier; Oleg V. Prezhdo; David Beljonne

A novel nonadiabatic molecular dynamics scheme is applied to study the singlet fission (SF) process in pentacene dimers as a function of longitudinal and lateral displacements of the molecular backbones. Detailed two-dimensional mappings of both instantaneous and long-term triplet yields are obtained, characterizing the advantageous and unfavorable stacking arrangements, which can be achieved by chemical substitutions to the bare pentacene molecule. We show that the SF rate can be increased by more than an order of magnitude through tuning the intermolecular packing, most notably when going from cofacial to the slipped stacked arrangements encountered in some pentacene derivatives. The simulations indicate that the SF process is driven by thermal electron-phonon fluctuations at ambient and high temperatures, expected in solar cell applications. Although charge-transfer states are key to construct continuous channels for SF, a large charge-transfer character of the photoexcited state is found to be not essential for efficient SF. The reported time domain study mimics directly numerous laser experiments and provides novel guidelines for designing efficient photovoltaic systems exploiting the SF process with optimum intermolecular packing.


Advanced Materials | 2015

Bulky End‐Capped [1]Benzothieno[3,2‐b]benzothiophenes: Reaching High‐Mobility Organic Semiconductors by Fine Tuning of the Crystalline Solid‐State Order

Guillaume Schweicher; Vincent Lemaur; Claude Niebel; Christian Ruzié; Ying Diao; Osamu Goto; Wen-Ya Lee; Yeongin Kim; Jean-Baptiste Arlin; Jolanta Karpinska; Alan R. Kennedy; Sean Parkin; Yoann Olivier; Stefan C. B. Mannsfeld; Jérôme Cornil; Yves Geerts; Zhenan Bao

A series of bulky end-capped [1]benzothieno[3,2-b]benzothiophenes (BTBTs) are developed in order to tune the packing structure via terminal substitution. A coupled theoretical and experimental study allows us to identify 2,7-di-tert-butylBTBT as a new high-performance organic semiconductor with large and well-balanced transfer integrals, as evidenced by quantum-chemical calculations. Single-crystal field-effect transistors show a remarkable average saturation mobility of 7.1 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) .


Advanced Materials | 2012

Unraveling the Mechanism of Molecular Doping in Organic Semiconductors

Alexander Mityashin; Yoann Olivier; Tanguy Van Regemorter; Cedric Rolin; Stijn Verlaak; Nicolas G. Martinelli; David Beljonne; Jérôme Cornil; Jan Genoe; Paul Heremans

The mechanism by which molecular dopants donate free charge carriers to the host organic semiconductor is investigated and is found to be quite different from the one in inorganic semiconductors. In organics, a strong correlation between the doping concentration and its charge donation efficiency is demonstrated. Moreover, there is a threshold doping level below which doping simply has no electrical effect.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2013

Exploring the Energy Landscape of the Charge Transport Levels in Organic Semiconductors at the Molecular Scale

Jérôme Cornil; Stijn Verlaak; Nicolas G. Martinelli; Alexander Mityashin; Yoann Olivier; T Van Regemorter; Gabriele D’Avino; Luca Muccioli; Claudio Zannoni; Frédéric Castet; David Beljonne; Paul Heremans

The extraordinary semiconducting properties of conjugated organic materials continue to attract attention across disciplines including materials science, engineering, chemistry, and physics, particularly with application to organic electronics. Such materials are used as active components in light-emitting diodes, field-effect transistors, or photovoltaic cells, as a substitute for (mostly Si-based) inorganic semiconducting materials. Many strategies developed for inorganic semiconductor device building (doping, p-n junctions, etc.) have been attempted, often successfully, with organics, even though the key electronic and photophysical properties of organic thin films are fundamentally different from those of their bulk inorganic counterparts. In particular, organic materials consist of individual units (molecules or conjugated segments) that are coupled by weak intermolecular forces. The flexibility of organic synthesis has allowed the development of more efficient opto-electronic devices including impressive improvements in quantum yields for charge generation in organic solar cells and in light emission in electroluminescent displays. Nonetheless, a number of fundamental questions regarding the working principles of these devices remain that preclude their full optimization. For example, the role of intermolecular interactions in driving the geometric and electronic structures of solid-state conjugated materials, though ubiquitous in organic electronic devices, has long been overlooked, especially when it comes to these interfaces with other (in)organic materials or metals. Because they are soft and in most cases disordered, conjugated organic materials support localized electrons or holes associated with local geometric distortions, also known as polarons, as primary charge carriers. The spatial localization of excess charges in organics together with low dielectric constant (ε) entails very large electrostatic effects. It is therefore not obvious how these strongly interacting electron-hole pairs can potentially escape from their Coulomb well, a process that is at the heart of photoconversion or molecular doping. Yet they do, with near-quantitative yield in some cases. Limited screening by the low dielectric medium in organic materials leads to subtle static and dynamic electronic polarization effects that strongly impact the energy landscape for charges, which offers a rationale for this apparent inconsistency. In this Account, we use different theoretical approaches to predict the energy landscape of charge carriers at the molecular level and review a few case studies highlighting the role of electrostatic interactions in conjugated organic molecules. We describe the pros and cons of different theoretical approaches that provide access to the energy landscape defining the motion of charge carriers. We illustrate the applications of these approaches through selected examples involving OFETs, OLEDs, and solar cells. The three selected examples collectively show that energetic disorder governs device performances and highlights the relevance of theoretical tools to probe energy landscapes in molecular assemblies.


ChemPhysChem | 2009

Influence of intermolecular vibrations on the electronic coupling in organic semiconductors: the case of anthracene and perfluoropentacene.

Nicolas G. Martinelli; Yoann Olivier; Stavros Athanasopoulos; Mari‐Carmen Ruiz Delgado; Kathryn R. Pigg; Demetrio A. da Silva Filho; Roel S. Sánchez-Carrera; Elisabetta Venuti; Raffaele Guido Della Valle; Jean-Luc Brédas; David Beljonne; Jérôme Cornil

We have performed classical molecular dynamics simulations and quantum-chemical calculations on molecular crystals of anthracene and perfluoropentacene. Our goal is to characterize the amplitudes of the room-temperature molecular displacements and the corresponding thermal fluctuations in electronic transfer integrals, which constitute a key parameter for charge transport in organic semiconductors. Our calculations show that the thermal fluctuations lead to Gaussian-like distributions of the transfer integrals centered around the values obtained for the equilibrium crystal geometry. The calculated distributions have been plugged into Monte-Carlo simulations of hopping transport, which show that lattice vibrations impact charge transport properties to various degrees depending on the actual crystal structure.


Advanced Materials | 2016

Unraveling unprecedented charge carrier mobility through structure property relationship of four isomers of didodecyl[1]benzothieno[3,2-b][1]benzothiophene

Yusuke Tsutsui; Guillaume Schweicher; Basab Chattopadhyay; Tsuneaki Sakurai; Jean-Baptiste Arlin; Christian Ruzié; Almaz Aliev; Artur Ciesielski; Silvia Colella; Alan R. Kennedy; Vincent Lemaur; Yoann Olivier; Rachid Hadji; Lionel Sanguinet; Frédéric Castet; Silvio Osella; Dmytro Dudenko; David Beljonne; Jérôme Cornil; Paolo Samorì; Shu Seki; Yves Geerts

The structural and electronic properties of four isomers of didodecyl[1]-benzothieno[3,2-b][1]benzothiophene (C12-BTBT) have been investigated. Results show the strong impact of the molecular packing on charge carrier transport and electronic polarization properties. Field-induced time-resolved microwave conductivity measurements unravel an unprecedented high average interfacial mobility of 170 cm(2) V(-1) s(-1) for the 2,7-isomer, holding great promise for the field of organic electronics.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Charge Dissociation at Interfaces between Discotic Liquid Crystals: The Surprising Role of Column Mismatch

Julien Idé; Raphaël Méreau; Laurent Ducasse; Frédéric Castet; Harald Bock; Yoann Olivier; Jérôme Cornil; David Beljonne; Gabriele D'Avino; Otello Maria Roscioni; Luca Muccioli; Claudio Zannoni

The semiconducting and self-assembling properties of columnar discotic liquid crystals have stimulated intense research toward their application in organic solar cells, although with a rather disappointing outcome to date in terms of efficiencies. These failures call for a rational strategy to choose those molecular design features (e.g., lattice parameter, length and nature of peripheral chains) that could optimize solar cell performance. With this purpose, in this work we address for the first time the construction of a realistic planar heterojunction between a columnar donor and acceptor as well as a quantitative measurement of charge separation and recombination rates using state of the art computational techniques. In particular, choosing as a case study the interface between a perylene donor and a benzoperylene diimide acceptor, we attempt to answer the largely overlooked question of whether having well-matching donor and acceptor columns at the interface is really beneficial for optimal charge separation. Surprisingly, it turns out that achieving a system with contiguous columns is detrimental to the solar cell efficiency and that engineering the mismatch is the key to optimal performance.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011

Polarizability and internal charge transfer in thiophene-triphenylamine hybrid π-conjugated systems.

Emilie Ripaud; Yoann Olivier; Philippe Leriche; Jérôme Cornil; Jean Roncali

Extended star-shaped conjugated systems consisting of dicyanovinyl electron-acceptor units connected to a triphenylamine core by means of thiophene (T), thienylenevinylene (TV), and bithiophene (BT) conjugating spacers have been synthesized. The analysis of the electronic properties of the molecules by UV-vis absorption spectroscopy, cyclic voltammetry, and theoretical calculations shows that the electronic properties of the systems depend on the length and rigidity of the conjugating spacer.

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Yves Geerts

Université libre de Bruxelles

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Guillaume Schweicher

Université libre de Bruxelles

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