“…Characterizing such motions is highly nontrivial, partly because of the organic/inorganic nature of the interface where the dye monolayer resides, which is difficult to probe both experimentally and theoretically. , Nevertheless, serious efforts have been made to gain insight into the structural and vibrational dynamics of sensitized metal oxide surfaces. Scanning tunneling microscopy (STM); X-ray, nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), infrared (IR), and photoelectron spectroscopies; and molecular dynamics (MD) simulations allow for an atomistic description of the dye molecule/metal oxide interface with estimations of the surface area per dye molecule and the binding modes and molecular orientations of individual dye molecules relative to the surface. ,,− Nonlinear optical methods such as sum frequency generation spectroscopy (SFG) are especially relevant to dye-sensitized systems because of their applicability to liquid/solid interfaces and monolayer sensitivity. − Adsorption structures and orientation distributions of sensitized surfaces are keys to building an accurate picture of DSSCs. − Others have investigated the effects of thermal fluctuations on these structural features, as well as on the electronic properties of dyes. ,− Nevertheless, to date, issues remain unresolved, including how the presence of other dye molecules affects these orientation distributions and whether this effect changes over time and, if so, on what time scale. As a result, not many models explicitly account for the effect of molecular motion on charge injection, diffusion, and/or recombination in DSSCs. ,, …”