3 research outputs found
Water at the Interface Between Defective Graphene and Cu or Pt (111) Surfaces
The
presence of defects in the graphenic layers deposited on metal surfaces
modifies the nature of the interaction. Unsaturated carbon atoms,
due to vacancies in the lattice, form strong organometallic bonds
with surface metal atoms that highly enhance the binding energy between
the two materials. We investigate by means of a wide set of dispersion-corrected
density functional theory calculations how such strong chemical bonds
affect both the electronic properties of these hybrid interfaces and
the chemical reactivity with water, which is commonly present in the
working conditions. We compare different metal substrates (Cu vs Pt)
that present a different type of interaction with graphene and with
defective graphene. This comparative analysis allows us to unravel
the controlling factors of water reactivity, the role played by the
carbon vacancies and by the confinement or “graphene cover
effect”. Water is capable of breaking the C–Cu bond
by dissociating at the undercoordinated carbon atom of the vacancy,
restoring the weak van der Waals type of interaction between the two
materials that allows for an easy detachment of graphene from the
metal, but the same is not true in the case of Pt, where C–Pt
bonds are much stronger. These conclusions can be used to rationalize
water reactivity at other defective graphene/metal interfaces
Functionalizing TiO<sub>2</sub> Nanoparticles with Fluorescent Cyanine Dye for Photodynamic Therapy and Bioimaging: A DFT and TDDFT Study
In
the field of nanomedicine, significant attention is
directed
toward near-infrared (NIR) light-responsive inorganic nanosystems,
primarily for their applications in photodynamic therapy and fluorescence
bioimaging. The crucial role of the NIR range lies in enabling optimal
tissue penetration, which is essential for both irradiating and detecting
nanoparticles deep within the human body. In this study, we employed
density functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) calculations
to explore the structural and electronic properties of cyanine-functionalized
TiO2 spherical nanoparticles (NPs) with a realistic diameter
of 2.2 nm. We revealed that different adsorption configurations of
cyanine (VG20-C1) on the TiO2 NP surface exhibit
distinct features in the optical spectra. These cyanine dyes, serving
as bifunctional linkers with two carboxylic end groups, can adsorb
in either a side-on mode (binding with both end groups)
or an end-on mode (binding only one end group). In end-on adsorption structures, low-energy excitations are
exclusive to dye-to-dye electronic transitions, while side-on structures exhibit electron charge transfer excitations from the
dye to the TiO2 NP at low energy. This thorough analysis
provides a rational foundation for designing cyanine-functionalized
TiO2 nanosystems with optimal optical characteristics tailored
for specific nanomedical applications such as photodynamic therapy
or fluorescence bioimaging