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Creators/Authors contains: "Maleszka, Jarek A."

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  1. Structural and functional heterogeneity is a consequence of the weak noncovalent interactions that direct the formation of organic materials from solution precursors. While covalent tethering of solution-phase assemblies provides a compelling strategy to enhance intermolecular order, the effects of this tethering strategy on the formed solid-state materials remain unestablished. This work uses pump–probe microscopy to compare excited-state dynamics in thin films fabricated from tethered perylene bisimide assemblies to those fabricated from noncovalent assemblies. On average, tethered films exhibit faster and more homogeneous excited-state lifetimes, consistent with stronger and more uniform intermolecular coupling. Optical measurements of excited-state diffusion show that the tethered film has ∼75% faster transport than the control film. Kinetic Monte Carlo modeling suggests that the reduction of site energetic disorder is sufficient to quantitatively explain the difference in diffusion coefficients. These results provide strong support that covalent tethering is a promising strategy to enhance the structural and energetic ordering in molecular materials. 
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