Abstract

The study concerns the impact of a difference in geometry of the side alkyl chains of oligothiophene derivatives of diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) on their spectroscopic properties and aggregation in solutions, in Langmuir layers, and thin films. Using a combination of theoretical and experimental approaches, this study aims to explain the aggregating behaviour of thiophene-substituted DPP derivatives. Various methods were used to characterise the dyes, including absorption spectroscopy also with polarized light, fluorescence spectroscopy, Langmuir techniques, and time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations. The presented results emphasise a significant impact of side alkyl chains on DPP's molecular behaviour, notably evident in thin-layer structures. Interestingly, the deconvolution of the absorption spectra revealed three bands in the red region. Insightful analysis of temperature-dependent absorption, excitation, and emission fluorescence spectra indicates the co-existence of monomer, dimer, and a higher aggregate forms, most likely a tetrameric structures. Moreover, such a complexity of molecular organisation of dyes appears already in the solution. Differences in spectral properties of the dyes studied are robustly visible in changes in the spectra of the air–water interface, where the dye with the branched side group changes the mutual orientation in dimeric structures, leading to the formation of H-type aggregates, which was observed as an almost 20-nm spectral blue shift during Langmuir layer compression. The results presented highlight the need for care in interpretation of the intensity ratio of DPP spectra and spectral shift as the sole determinants of the aggregation state.

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