Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > A New Combined Computational and Experimental A...

Associated organisational unit

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

A New Combined Computational and Experimental Approach to Characterize Photoactive Conjugated 3D Polymers

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Published

Standard

A New Combined Computational and Experimental Approach to Characterize Photoactive Conjugated 3D Polymers. / Mollart, Catherine; Heasman, Patrick; Sherrett, Ellena et al.
In: Small, Vol. 21, No. 9, e2407187, 05.03.2025.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Mollart C, Heasman P, Sherrett E, Fletcher PATJ, Fayon P, Thomas JMH et al. A New Combined Computational and Experimental Approach to Characterize Photoactive Conjugated 3D Polymers. Small. 2025 Mar 5;21(9):e2407187. Epub 2025 Feb 5. doi: 10.1002/smll.202407187

Author

Bibtex

@article{e9695cf302be41f49ed50e882f2f79c6,
title = "A New Combined Computational and Experimental Approach to Characterize Photoactive Conjugated 3D Polymers",
abstract = "A tractable new computational protocol is proposed to elucidate oligomeric‐scale detail from experimental spectra, providing insight into the local and longer‐range electronic and molecular structures of amorphous materials. The protocol uses an in‐house code Ambuild to grow kinetically‐controlled representative oligomeric clusters of an amorphous polymeric material. Generating many clusters, the statistical prevalence of different structural motifs is identified, and used to develop a {\textquoteleft}subset{\textquoteright} of structures that capture a broad range of important morphologies. Subsequent electronic structure calculations allow the prediction of IR, NMR, and UV–vis spectra of the bulk materials, providing significant insight into oligomeric scale topologies and helping develop structure–property relationships by identifying the underlying structural origins of different spectral features observed experimentally. Two known, and two novel, pyrene‐based conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs) are synthesized and characterized as a test bed for this newly‐proposed protocol. Meaningful IR, NMR, and UV–vis absorption spectral data, and experimentally comparable computationally derived spectra are obtained. Whilst IR and NMR reliably probe the local environment, UV–vis absorption spectroscopy is found to be particularly sensitive to the longer‐range structural motifs observed on an oligomeric scale, providing significant structural insight into the synthesized materials with reasonable computational cost.",
keywords = "electronic structure calculations, CMPs, structure‐property relationships, polymers, spectroscopy, photo‐active materials, structure elucidation",
author = "Catherine Mollart and Patrick Heasman and Ellena Sherrett and Fletcher, {Peter A. T. J} and Pierre Fayon and Thomas, {Jens M. H.} and Villius Franckevi{\v c}ius and Peach, {Michael J. G.} and Abbie Trewin",
year = "2025",
month = mar,
day = "5",
doi = "10.1002/smll.202407187",
language = "English",
volume = "21",
journal = "Small",
issn = "1613-6810",
publisher = "Wiley-VCH Verlag",
number = "9",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A New Combined Computational and Experimental Approach to Characterize Photoactive Conjugated 3D Polymers

AU - Mollart, Catherine

AU - Heasman, Patrick

AU - Sherrett, Ellena

AU - Fletcher, Peter A. T. J

AU - Fayon, Pierre

AU - Thomas, Jens M. H.

AU - Franckevičius, Villius

AU - Peach, Michael J. G.

AU - Trewin, Abbie

PY - 2025/3/5

Y1 - 2025/3/5

N2 - A tractable new computational protocol is proposed to elucidate oligomeric‐scale detail from experimental spectra, providing insight into the local and longer‐range electronic and molecular structures of amorphous materials. The protocol uses an in‐house code Ambuild to grow kinetically‐controlled representative oligomeric clusters of an amorphous polymeric material. Generating many clusters, the statistical prevalence of different structural motifs is identified, and used to develop a ‘subset’ of structures that capture a broad range of important morphologies. Subsequent electronic structure calculations allow the prediction of IR, NMR, and UV–vis spectra of the bulk materials, providing significant insight into oligomeric scale topologies and helping develop structure–property relationships by identifying the underlying structural origins of different spectral features observed experimentally. Two known, and two novel, pyrene‐based conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs) are synthesized and characterized as a test bed for this newly‐proposed protocol. Meaningful IR, NMR, and UV–vis absorption spectral data, and experimentally comparable computationally derived spectra are obtained. Whilst IR and NMR reliably probe the local environment, UV–vis absorption spectroscopy is found to be particularly sensitive to the longer‐range structural motifs observed on an oligomeric scale, providing significant structural insight into the synthesized materials with reasonable computational cost.

AB - A tractable new computational protocol is proposed to elucidate oligomeric‐scale detail from experimental spectra, providing insight into the local and longer‐range electronic and molecular structures of amorphous materials. The protocol uses an in‐house code Ambuild to grow kinetically‐controlled representative oligomeric clusters of an amorphous polymeric material. Generating many clusters, the statistical prevalence of different structural motifs is identified, and used to develop a ‘subset’ of structures that capture a broad range of important morphologies. Subsequent electronic structure calculations allow the prediction of IR, NMR, and UV–vis spectra of the bulk materials, providing significant insight into oligomeric scale topologies and helping develop structure–property relationships by identifying the underlying structural origins of different spectral features observed experimentally. Two known, and two novel, pyrene‐based conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs) are synthesized and characterized as a test bed for this newly‐proposed protocol. Meaningful IR, NMR, and UV–vis absorption spectral data, and experimentally comparable computationally derived spectra are obtained. Whilst IR and NMR reliably probe the local environment, UV–vis absorption spectroscopy is found to be particularly sensitive to the longer‐range structural motifs observed on an oligomeric scale, providing significant structural insight into the synthesized materials with reasonable computational cost.

KW - electronic structure calculations

KW - CMPs

KW - structure‐property relationships

KW - polymers

KW - spectroscopy

KW - photo‐active materials

KW - structure elucidation

U2 - 10.1002/smll.202407187

DO - 10.1002/smll.202407187

M3 - Journal article

VL - 21

JO - Small

JF - Small

SN - 1613-6810

IS - 9

M1 - e2407187

ER -