203 research outputs found

    Synthesis, Optical and Electrochemical Properties of High-Quality Cross-Conjugated Aromatic Polyketones

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    This paper describes the synthesis and characterization of three new aromatic polyketones with repeating units based on 2,2′-(2,5-dihexyl-1,4-phenylene) dithiophene (PTK), 2,2′-(9,9-dihexyl-9H-fluorene-2,7-diyl)dithiophene (PFTK), and 4,7-bis(3-hexylthiophen-2-yl)benzo[c][1,2,5]thiadiazole (PBTK). These polymers were obtained with a one-pot Suzuki-Miyaura cross-coupling-promoted homopolymerization to afford high-quality, defect-free polymers. Experimental and theoretical studies were applied to investigate their optical and electrical properties. The cross-conjugated nature of aromatic polyketones imparts excellent thermal stability. Exposure to acid converts the cross-conjugation to linear-conjugation, enabling the dynamic tuning of optoelectronic properties

    Stabilizing cations in the backbones of conjugated polymers

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    We synthesized a cross-conjugated polymer containing ketones in the backbone and converted it to a linearly conjugated, cationic polyarylmethine via a process we call "spinless doping" to create a new class of materials, conjugated polyions. This process involves activating the ketones with a Lewis acid and converting them to trivalent cations via the nucleophilic addition of electron-rich aryl moieties. Spinless doping lowers the optical band gap from 3.26 to 1.55 eV while leaving the intrinsic semiconductor properties of the polymer intact. Electrochemical reduction (traditional doping) further decreases the predicted gap to 1.18 eV and introduces radicals to form positive polarons; here, n-doping produces a p-doped polymer in its metallic state. Treatment with a nucleophile (NaOMe) converts the cationic polymer to a neutral, non-conjugated state, allowing the band gap to be tuned chemically, postpolymerization. The synthesis of these materials is carried out entirely without the use of Sn or Pd and relies on scalable Friedel-Crafts chemistry

    Evidence for Quantum Interference in SAMs of Arylethynylene Thiolates in Tunneling Junctions with Eutectic Ga-In (EGaIn) Top-Contacts

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    This paper compares the current density (J) versus applied bias (V) of self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of three different ethynylthiophenol-functionalized anthracene derivatives of approximately the same thickness with linear-conjugation (AC), cross-conjugation (AQ), and broken-conjugation (AH) using liquid eutectic Ga-In (EGaIn) supporting a native skin (~1 nm thick) of Ga2O3 as a nondamaging, conformal top-contact. This skin imparts non-Newtonian rheological properties that distinguish EGaIn from other top-contacts; however, it may also have limited the maximum values of J observed for AC. The measured values of J for AH and AQ are not significantly different (J ≈ 10-1 A/cm2 at V = 0.4 V). For AC, however, J is 1 (using log averages) or 2 (using Gaussian fits) orders of magnitude higher than for AH and AQ. These values are in good qualitative agreement with gDFTB calculations on single AC, AQ, and AH molecules chemisorbed between Au contacts that predict currents, I, that are 2 orders of magnitude higher for AC than for AH at 0 < |V| < 0.4 V. The calculations predict a higher value of I for AQ than for AH; however, the magnitude is highly dependent on the position of the Fermi energy, which cannot be calculated precisely. In this sense, the theoretical predictions and experimental conclusions agree that linearly conjugated AC is significantly more conductive than either cross-conjugated AQ or broken conjugate AH and that AQ and AH cannot necessarily be easily differentiated from each other. These observations are ascribed to quantum interference effects. The agreement between the theoretical predictions on single molecules and the measurements on SAMs suggest that molecule-molecule interactions do not play a significant role in the transport properties of AC, AQ, and AH.

    Photo-oxidation of ethylene over mesoporous Tio2/Sio2 catalysts

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    Mesoporous TiO2/SiO2 catalysts were prepared in order to increase the post-harvest life of climacteric fruits and vegetables reducing ethylene concentration by photo-oxidation. TiO2/SiO2 powders were synthesized by sol-gel method using titanium isopropoxide Ti(OiPr)4 and tetraethoxysilane Si(OC2H5)4 as source of metal oxides. Mesoporous SiO2 framework was used as catalyst support of nanostructured TiO2 to enhance the photocatalytic efficiency. Different TiO2/SiO2 molar ratios were prepared through sol-gel process. A liquid-crystal template route allowed to obtain the mesoporous silica structure, and contemporary TiO2 insertion in the silica framework. The X-ray diffraction (XRD) analysis demonstrated that silica insertion in TiO2 framework inhibits the anatase to rutile phase transformation at higher sintering temperature. The photocatalytic efficiency of the catalysts was measured by the photo-oxidation of ethylene gas under UV light irradiation. Complete photo-oxidation of ethylene was observed after 24 h of reaction time. Results show that the silica framework increases the surface area of the composites and make crystalline anatase phase more stable at higher temperature

    Conjugated Polyions Enable Organic Photovoltaics Processed from Green Solvents

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    This paper describes the design, synthesis, and optical and electronic properties of two conjugated polymers CPIZ-B and CPIZ-T that incorporate closed-shell cations into their conjugated backbones, balanced by anionic pendant groups. The zwitterionic nature of the polymers renders them soluble in and processable from polar, protic solvents to form semiconducting films that are not doped. These unique properties are confirmed by absorption and electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy. The energies of the unoccupied states respond to the tritylium moieties in the conjugated backbone, while the occupied states respond to the electron-donating ability of the uncharged, aromatic units in the backbone. Films cast from 80:20 HCOOH/H2O by volume show good electron mobilities, enabling a photovoltaic effect in proof-of-concept, bilayer solar cells

    Conductance statistics from a large array of sub-10 nm molecular junctions

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    Devices made of few molecules constitute the miniaturization limit that both inorganic and organic-based electronics aspire to reach. However, integration of millions of molecular junctions with less than 100 molecules each has been a long technological challenge requiring well controlled nanometric electrodes. Here we report molecular junctions fabricated on a large array of sub-10 nm single crystal Au nanodots electrodes, a new approach that allows us to measure the conductance of up to a million of junctions in a single conducting Atomic Force Microscope (C-AFM) image. We observe two peaks of conductance for alkylthiol molecules. Tunneling decay constant (beta) for alkanethiols, is in the same range as previous studies. Energy position of molecular orbitals, obtained by transient voltage spectroscopy, varies from peak to peak, in correlation with conductance values.Comment: ACS Nano (in press

    Device-Compatible Chiroptical Surfaces through Self-Assembly of Enantiopure Allenes

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    Chiroptical methods have been proven to be superior compared to their achiral counterparts for the structural elucidation of many compounds. To expand the use of chiroptical systems to everyday applications, the development of functional materials exhibiting intense chiroptical responses is essential. Particularly, tailored and robust interfaces compatible with standard device operation conditions are required. Herein, we present the design and synthesis of chiral allenes and their use for the functionalization of gold surfaces. The self-assembly results in a monolayer-thin room-temperature-stable upstanding chiral architecture as ascertained by ellipsometry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure. Moreover, these nanostructures anchored to device-compatible substrates feature intense chiroptical second harmonic generation. Both straightforward preparation of the device-compatible interfaces along with their chiroptical nature provide major prospects for everyday applications.</p

    Device-Compatible Chiroptical Surfaces through Self-Assembly of Enantiopure Allenes

    Get PDF
    Chiroptical methods have been proven to be superior compared to their achiral counterparts for the structural elucidation of many compounds. To expand the use of chiroptical systems to everyday applications, the development of functional materials exhibiting intense chiroptical responses is essential. Particularly, tailored and robust interfaces compatible with standard device operation conditions are required. Herein, we present the design and synthesis of chiral allenes and their use for the functionalization of gold surfaces. The self-assembly results in a monolayer-thin room-temperature-stable upstanding chiral architecture as ascertained by ellipsometry, X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy, and near-edge X-ray absorption fine structure. Moreover, these nanostructures anchored to device-compatible substrates feature intense chiroptical second harmonic generation. Both straightforward preparation of the device-compatible interfaces along with their chiroptical nature provide major prospects for everyday applications

    Cross-Conjugated n-Dopable Aromatic Polyketone

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    This paper describes the synthesis and characterization of a high molecular weight cross-conjugated polyketone synthesized via scalable Friedel Crafts chemistry. Cross-conjugated polyketones are precursors to conjugated polyions; they become orders of magnitude more conductive after a two-electron reduction and demonstrate reversible spinless doping upon protonation with acids. Cross-conjugated polyketones are a new polymer platform that possess the same optoelectronic tunability as conventional polymers but with excellent thermal and oxidative stability. We constructed a proof-of-concept organic light-emitting diode device and demonstrate that a cross-conjugated polyketone can be successfully used as an n-dopable semiconducting material

    Solid-State Protein Junctions:Cross-Laboratory Study Shows Preservation of Mechanism at Varying Electronic Coupling

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    Successful integration of proteins in solid-state electronics requires contacting them in a non-invasive fashion, with a solid conducting surface for immobilization as one such contact. The contacts can affect and even dominate the measured electronic transport. Often substrates, substrate treatments, protein immobilization, and device geometries differ between laboratories. Thus the question arises how far results from different laboratories and platforms are comparable and how to distinguish genuine protein electronic transport properties from platform-induced ones. We report a systematic comparison of electronic transport measurements between different laboratories, using all commonly used large-area schemes to contact a set of three proteins of largely different types. Altogether we study eight different combinations of molecular junction configurations, designed so that Ageo of junctions varies from 105 to 10−3 μm2. Although for the same protein, measured with similar device geometry, results compare reasonably well, there are significant differences in current densities (an intensive variable) between different device geometries. Likely, these originate in the critical contact-protein coupling (∼contact resistance), in addition to the actual number of proteins involved, because the effective junction contact area depends on the nanometric roughness of the electrodes and at times, even the proteins may increase this roughness. On the positive side, our results show that understanding what controls the coupling can make the coupling a design knob. In terms of extensive variables, such as temperature, our comparison unanimously shows the transport to be independent of temperature for all studied configurations and proteins. Our study places coupling and lack of temperature activation as key aspects to be considered in both modeling and practice of protein electronic transport experiments
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