School of Chemistry - Research Publications

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    Chemical vapor deposition growth of phase-selective inorganic lead halide perovskite films for sensitive photodetectors
    Xu, W ; Niu, M ; Yang, X ; Chen, H ; Cai, X ; Smith, TA ; Ghiggino, KP ; Hao, X (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2021-01)
    Inorganic lead halide perovskites are attractive optoelectronic materials owing to their relative stability compared to organic cation alternatives. The chemical vapor deposition (CVD) method offers potential for high quality perovskite film growth. The deposition temperature is a critical parameter determining the film quality owing to the melting difference between the precursors. Here, perovskite films were deposited by the CVD method at various temperatures between 500−800 °C. The perovskite phase converts from CsPb2Br5 to CsPbBr3 gradually as the deposition temperature is increased. The grain size of the perovskite films also increases with temperature. The phase transition mechanism was clarified. The photoexcited state dynamics were investigated by spatially and temporally resolved fluorescence measurements. The perovskite film deposited under 750 °C condition is of the CsPbBr3 phase, showing low trap-state density and large crystalline grain size. A photodetector based on perovskite films shows high photocurrent and an on/off ratio of ∼2.5 × 104.
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    Morphological Requirements for Nanoscale Electric Field Buildup in a Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cell
    Schwarz, KN ; Mitchell, VD ; Khan, S-U-Z ; Lee, C ; Reinhold, A ; Smith, TA ; Ghiggino, KP ; Jones, DJ ; Rand, BP ; Scholes, GD (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2021-01-14)
    The morphology of organic semiconductors is critical to their function in optoelectronic devices and is particularly crucial in the donor-acceptor mixture that comprises the bulk heterojunction of organic solar cells. Here, energy landscapes can play integral roles in charge photogeneration, and recently have been shown to drive the accumulation of charge carriers away from the interface, resulting in the buildup of large nanoscale electric fields, much like a capacitor. In this work we combine morphological and spectroscopic data to outline the requirements for this interdomain charge accumulation, finding that this effect is driven by a three-phase morphology that creates an energetic cascade for charge carriers. By adjusting annealing conditions, we show that domain purity, but not size, is critical for an electro-absorption feature to grow-in. This demonstrates that the energy landscape around the interface shapes the movement of charges and that pure domains are required for charge carrier buildup that results in reduced recombination and large interdomain nanoscale electric fields.
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    Electronic spectroscopy and photophysics of calix[4]azulene
    Stevens, AL ; Yeow, C ; White, JM ; Bradley, SJ ; Ghiggino, KP ; Steer, RP (ELSEVIER SCIENCE SA, 2021-01-15)
    Calix[4]azulene is a non-alternant aromatic calixarene composed of four azulene chromophores linked by methylene groups. Its photochemical stability, photophysical properties and an analysis of its electronic spectra are reported using monomeric azulene as a known reference standard. The molecule is stable when excited in its visible and near uv absorptions and, unlike azulene, produces no measurable “anti-Kasha” fluorescence when excited to its second excited singlet state, S2. This lack of fluorescence places the lifetime of the initially excited, photochemically stable S2 species at less than 1 picosecond. A significant, bathochromic shift of the S2 absorption band system in the calixarene, and the appearance of an additional weak, broad absorption immediately to the red signals significant intramolecular chromophore interaction. Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy using excitation in this red-shifted tail of the S2 band system reveals a very weak transient signal most of which decays within one ps, but with suggestions of a slightly longer-lived underlying component. No longer-lived T1 triplet transient is observed. A complete analysis of the data using monomeric azulene as a reference suggests, following elimination of several alternate mechanisms, that the initially excited S2 species may be relaxing via a novel singlet-singlet fission process.
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    Spectroscopic study of L-DOPA and dopamine binding on novel gold nanoparticles towards more efficient drug-delivery system for Parkinson's disease
    Kalcec, N ; Peranic, N ; Barbir, R ; Hall, CR ; Smith, TA ; Sani, MA ; Frkanec, R ; Separovic, F ; Vrcek, IV (PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD, 2022-03-05)
    Nano-drug delivery systems may potentially overcome current challenges in the treatment of Parkinson's disease (PD) by enabling targeted delivery and more efficient blood-brain penetration ability. This study investigates novel gold nanoparticles (AuNPs) to be used as delivery systems for L-DOPA and dopamine by considering their binding capabilities in the presence and absence of a model protein, bovine serum albumin (BSA). Four different AuNPs were prepared by surface functionalization with polyethylene glycol (PEG), 1-adamantylamine (Ad), 1-adamantylglycine (AdGly), and peptidoglycan monomer (PGM). Fluorescence and UV-Vis measurements demonstrated the strongest binding affinity and L-DOPA/dopamine loading efficiency for PGM-functionalized AuNPs with negligible impact of the serum protein presence. Thermodynamic analysis revealed a spontaneous binding process between L-DOPA or dopamine and AuNPs that predominantly occurred through van der Waals interactions/hydrogen bonds or electrostatic interactions. These results represent PGM-functionalized AuNPs as the most efficient at L-DOPA and dopamine binding with a potential to become a drug-delivery system for neurodegenerative diseases. Detailed investigation of L-DOPA/dopamine interactions with different AuNPs was described here for the first time. Moreover, this study highlights a cost- and time-effective methodology for evaluating drug binding to nanomaterials.
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    Growth of Gold Nanorods: A SAXS Study
    Seibt, S ; Zhang, H ; Mudie, S ; Foerster, S ; Mulvaney, P (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2021-09-16)
    Using simultaneous, in situ optical spectroscopy and time-resolved, small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), we have directly monitored the seeded growth of nearly monodisperse gold nanorods using hydroquinone as the reductant. Growth of the rods is much slower than with the ascorbate ion, allowing the rate of growth along both the longitudinal and transverse directions to be independently determined. The thickness of the stabilizing CTAB layer (3.2 ± 0.3 nm) has also been extracted. We find that increasing the hydrogen tetrachloroaurate(III) concentration produces longer rods, while conversely, increasing the hydroquinone concentration reduces the final aspect ratio. The final number of gold rods is smaller than the initial number of seed particles and decreases in the presence of larger concentrations of HAuCl4. The SAXS data reveal an early transition from a spherical morphology to an ellipsoidal one and then to spherically capped cylinders. The growth curve exhibits at least three distinct regimes: an initial phase comprising spherical seed growth, followed by symmetry breaking and slow elongation. A third phase is marked by rapid rod growth and increases in the aspect ratio. This process is temporally well resolved from the initial symmetry breaking but typically occurs when the rods are around 6 nm in diameter using hydroquinone as the reductant. The results provide qualitative support for the “popcorn model” proposed by Edgar et al. [ Formation of Gold Nanorods by a Stochastic “Popcorn” Mechanism. ACS Nano 2012, 6, 1116 1125 ].
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    Spectroelectrochemistry of Colloidal CdSe Quantum Dots
    Ashokan, A ; Mulvaney, P (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2021-02-23)
    Solution-phase spectroelectrochemistry was used to study electron injection into colloidal CdSe quantum dots (QDs) with sizes ranging from 3.4 to 11.1 nm in tetrahydrofuran (THF). The absorbance and photoluminescence of the QDs were monitored in response to both charging and discharging cycles, and the optical changes were reversible on a timescale of minutes. Bleaching of the QD 1S3/2h1Se exciton state was used to determine the conduction band energy levels. We found that the negative trion state was stable in THF for hours under an applied cathodic potential. Both the degree of bleaching and the recovery of the exciton state depended on the applied potential. Based on the current and charge measurements, we found that between 10 and 150 electrons were injected into the QDs, depending on the electrode potential and QD size. Most of the electron injection occurred below the band edge and led to quenching of the QD photoluminescence. The potential at which injection into QDs occurred depended on the nature of the QD ligands.
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    Frequency Shift Surface-Enhanced Raman Spectroscopy Sensing: An Ultrasensitive Multiplex Assay for Biomarkers in Human Health
    Zhu, W ; Hutchison, JA ; Dong, M ; Li, M (AMER CHEMICAL SOC, 2021-05-28)
    The sensitive and selective detection of biomarkers for human health remains one of the grand challenges of the analytical sciences. Compared to established methods (colorimetric, (chemi) luminescent), surface-enhanced Raman spectroscopy (SERS) is an emerging alternative with enormous potential for ultrasensitive biological detection. Indeed even attomolar (10-18 M) detection limits are possible for SERS due to an orders-of-magnitude boosting of Raman signals at the surface of metallic nanostructures by surface plasmons. However, challenges remain for SERS assays of large biomolecules, as the largest enhancements require the biomarker to enter a "hot spot" nanogap between metal nanostructures. The frequency-shift SERS method has gained popularity in recent years as an alternative assay that overcomes this drawback. It measures frequency shifts in intense SERS peaks of a Raman reporter during binding events on biomolecules (protein coupling, DNA hybridization, etc.) driven by mechanical transduction, charge transfer, or local electric field effects. As such, it retains the excellent multiplexing capability of SERS, with multiple analytes being identifiable by a spectral fingerprint in a single read-out. Meanwhile, like refractive index surface plasmon resonance methods, frequency-shift SERS measures the shift of an intense signal rather than resolving a peak above noise, easing spectroscopic resolution requirements. SERS frequency-shift assays have proved particularly suitable for sensing large, highly charged biomolecules that alter hydrogen-bonding networks upon specific binding. Herein we discuss the frequency-shift SERS method and promising applications in (multiplex) biomarker sensing as well as extensions to ion and gas sensing and much more.
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    Unusual Alternating Crystallization-Induced Emission Enhancement Behavior in Nonconjugated ω-Phenylalkyl Tropylium Salts
    Crocker, RD ; Pace, DP ; Zhang, B ; Lyons, DJM ; Bhadbhade, MM ; Wong, WWH ; Binh, KM ; Thanh, VN (American Chemical Society, 2021-11-22)
    The alternating physical properties, especially melting points, of α,ω-disubstituted n-alkanes and their parent n-alkanes had been known since Baeyer’s report in 1877. There is, however, no general and comprehensive explanation for such a phenomenon. Herein, we report the synthesis and examination of a series of novel ω-phenyl n-alkyl tropylium tetrafluoroborates, which also display alternation in their physicochemical characters. Despite being organic salts, the compounds with odd numbers of carbons in the alkyl bridge exist as room temperature ionic liquids. In stark contrast to this, the analogues with even numbers of carbons in the linker are crystalline solids. These solid nonconjugated molecules exhibit curious photoluminescent properties, which can be attributed to their ability to form through-space charge-transfer complexes to cause crystallization-induced emission enhancement. Most notably, the compound with the highest photoluminescent quantum yield in this series showed an unusual arrangement of carbocationic dimer in the solid state. A combination of XRD analysis and ab initio calculations revealed interesting insights into these systems.
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    Suppressing Kinetic Aggregation of Non-Fullerene Acceptor via Versatile Alloy States Enables High-Efficiency and Stable Ternary Polymer Solar Cells
    Zhang, K-N ; Guo, J-J ; Zhang, L-J ; Qin, C-C ; Yin, H ; Gao, X-Y ; Hao, X-T (Wiley, 2021-05-17)
    Despite considerable advances devoted to improving the operational stability of organic solar cells (OSCs), the metastable morphology degradation remains a challenging obstacle for their practical application. Herein, the stabilizing function of the alloy states in the photoactive layer from the perspective of controlling the aggregation characteristics of non‐fullerene acceptors (NFAs), is revealed. The alloy‐like model is adopted separately into host donor and acceptor materials of the state‐of‐the‐art binary PM6:BTP‐4Cl blend with the self‐stable polymer acceptor PDI‐2T and small molecule donor DRCN5T as the third components, delivering the simultaneously enhanced photovoltaic efficiency and storage stability. In such ternary systems, two separate arguments can rationalize their operating principles: (1) the acceptor alloys strengthen the conformational rigidity of BTP‐4Cl molecules to restrain the intramolecular vibrations for rapid relaxation of high‐energy excited states to stabilize BTP‐4Cl acceptor. (2) The donor alloys optimize the fibril network microstructure of PM6 polymer to restrict the kinetic diffusion and aggregation of BTP‐4Cl molecules. According to the superior morphological stability, non‐radiative defect trapping coefficients can be drastically reduced without forming the long‐lived, trapped charge species in ternary blends. The results highlight the novel protective mechanisms of engineering the alloy‐like composites for reinforcing the long‐term stability of NFA‐based ternary OSCs.
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    Ternary-Assisted Sequential Solution Deposition Enables Efficient All-Polymer Solar Cells with Tailored Vertical-Phase Distribution
    Cui, F-Z ; Chen, Z-H ; Qiao, J-W ; Wang, T ; Lu, G-H ; Yin, H ; Hao, X-T (Wiley, 2022-06-10)
    All-polymer solar cells (all-PSCs) have received attention in recent years for their desirable properties in power conversion efficiency and long-term operational stability. However, it is still a big challenge to acquire an “ideal” vertical-phase distribution of polymer/polymer blends due to the non-ideal molecular conformations and mixing behaviors. Herein, a ternary-assisted sequential solution deposition (SSD) strategy is adopted to regulate the vertical compositional profile of all-PSCs. A favorable acceptor(donor)-enriched phase near the cathode(anode) can be obtained by a ternary-assisted SSD strategy. With such a compositional profile, the exciton yield and carrier density can be enhanced by the vertical component gradient. Remarkably, the non-geminate recombination is suppressed with an improved exciton diffusion length (15.36 nm) that delivers an outstanding power conversion efficiency over 16% of the ternary PM6/PY-IT:PDI-2T SSD devices. This work demonstrates the success of ternary-assisted SSD strategy in reorganizing the vertical-phase distribution, which provides a feasible route for a potential ternary device construction toward efficient all-polymer photovoltaics.