“…On the one hand, the optical properties of the rylene diimide-based system can be tuned by the central rylene moiety [5,6], i.e., increasing the number of naphthalene moieties (Figure 1b) can drastically alter the absorption range from ultraviolet to visible and to the infrared region. On the other hand, the lateral extension of the π-conjugation system based on NDI, the smallest rylene diimide molecule, has also been examined by fusing different aromatic rings, such as benzene [7][8][9], thiophene [10], thiazole [11], benzo [b]thiophene [12], quinoxaline [13,14], benzo [b]pyrrole [15], and so on ( Figure 1c). In contrast to the former vertical π-extension, the latter approach is a promising way of controlling the electronic structure of the resulting core-extended NDI derivatives because the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) of the system tends to localize on the NDI skeleton, i.e., the vertical molecular axis, whereas the highest occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) tends to delocalize in the lateral direction through the naphthalene 2-, 3-, 6-, and 7-carbon atoms.…”