Abstract

We are witnessing a change of paradigm from the conventional top-down to the bottom-up fabrication of nanodevices and particularly optoelectronic devices. A promising example of the bottom-up approach is self-assembling of molecules into layers with predictable and reproducible structural, electronic and optical properties. Nucleobases possess extraordinary ability to self-assembly into one-, two-, and three-dimensional structures. Optical properties of nucleotides are not suitable for wider application to optoelectronics and photovoltaics due to their large optical band gap, which is in contrast to rylene-based dyes that have been intensively investigated in organic optoelectronics. However, these lack the self-assembly capability of nucleobases. Combinations of covalently decorated guanine molecules with rylene type chromophores present ‘the best of the both worlds’. Due to the large size of such compounds and its flexible nature their self-assemblies have not been fully understood yet. Here, we use a theoretical approach to study the structural, energetic and optical properties of rylene-based dye decorated guanine (GPDI), as self-assembled on a graphene sheet. Particularly we utilize the density-functional based tight-binding method to study atomic structure of these systems including the potential energy surface of GPDI and stability and organization of single- and multilayered GPDIs on graphene sheet. Using density-functional theory (DFT) we employ the energy decomposition analysis to gain a deeper insight into the contributions of different moieties to stability of GPDI films. Using time dependent DFT we analyze optical properties of these systems. We find that atomically thin films consisting of only a few molecular layers with large surface areas are more favorable than isolated thick islands. Our study of excited states indicates existence of charge separated states similar to ones found in the well-studied hydrogen bonded organic frameworks. The self-assembly characterized with a large homogeneous coverage and long-living charge-separated states provide the great potential for optoelectronic applications.

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