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Gecko-Inspired Biocidal Organic Nanocrystals Initiated from a Pencil-Drawn Graphite Template
The biocidal properties of gecko skin and cicada wings have inspired the synthesis of synthetic surfaces decorated with high aspect ratio nanostructures that inactivate microorganisms. Here, we investigate the bactericidal activity of oriented zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) nanopillars grown using a simple pencil-drawn graphite templating technique. By varying the evaporation time, nanopillars initiated from graphite that was scribbled using a pencil onto silicon substrates were optimized to yield a high inactivation of the Gram-negative bacteria, Escherichia coli. We next adapted the procedure so that analogous nanopillars could be grown from pencil-drawn graphite scribbled onto stainless steel, flexible polyimide foil, and glass substrates. Time-dependent bacterial cytotoxicity studies indicate that the oriented nanopillars grown on all four substrates inactivated up to 97% of the E. coli quickly, in 15 min or less. These results suggest that organic nanostructures, which can be easily grown on a broad range of substrates hold potential as a new class of biocidal surfaces that kill microbes quickly and potentially, without spreading antibiotic-resistance genes
A História da Alimentação: balizas historiográficas
Os M. pretenderam traçar um quadro da História da Alimentação, não como um novo ramo epistemológico da disciplina, mas como um campo em desenvolvimento de práticas e atividades especializadas, incluindo pesquisa, formação, publicações, associações, encontros acadêmicos, etc. Um breve relato das condições em que tal campo se assentou faz-se preceder de um panorama dos estudos de alimentação e temas correia tos, em geral, segundo cinco abardagens Ia biológica, a econômica, a social, a cultural e a filosófica!, assim como da identificação das contribuições mais relevantes da Antropologia, Arqueologia, Sociologia e Geografia. A fim de comentar a multiforme e volumosa bibliografia histórica, foi ela organizada segundo critérios morfológicos. A seguir, alguns tópicos importantes mereceram tratamento à parte: a fome, o alimento e o domínio religioso, as descobertas européias e a difusão mundial de alimentos, gosto e gastronomia. O artigo se encerra com um rápido balanço crítico da historiografia brasileira sobre o tema
Enhanced device efficiency and long-term stability via boronic acid-based self-assembled monolayer modification of indium tin oxide in a planar perovskite solar cell
WOS:000444355700085PubMed:30088757Interfacial engineering is essential for the development of highly efficient and stable solar cells through minimizing energetic losses at interfaces. Self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) have been shown as a handle to tune the work function (WF) of indium tin oxide (ITO), improving photovoltaic cell performance and device stability. In this study, we utilize a new class of boronic acid-based fluorine-terminated SAMs to modify ITO surfaces in planar perovskite solar cells. The SAM treatment demonstrates an increase of the WF of ITO, an enhancement of the short-circuit current, and a passivation of trap states at the ITO/[poly(3,4ethylenedioxylenethiophene):poly(styrenesulfonic acid)] interface. Device stability improves upon SAM modification, with efficiency decreasing only 20% after one month. Our work highlights a simple treatment route to achieve hysteresis-free, reproducible, stable, and highly efficient (16%) planar perovskite solar cells.Tubitak 2211-C special areas [1649B031502037]; TubitakTurkiye Bilimsel ve Teknolojik Arastirma Kurumu (TUBITAK) [Tubitak 2214/A-1059B141501315]; Turkey Scholarship Council [2214/A -1059B141501316]; Office of Naval ResearchOffice of Naval Research [N00014-16-1-2612, N000147-14-1-0053]We acknowledge to Haydar Akdag and Dr. Cisem Kirbiyik for their valuable discussion during the study. D.A.K. thank to (Tubitak 2211-C special areas -1649B031502037) and to Tubitak research fellowship (Tubitak 2214/A-1059B141501315). K.K. thank to Turkey Scholarship Council (2214/A -1059B141501316). J.J.K., D.L.G.A., E.K.B., and A.L.B. acknowledge the Office of Naval Research (N00014-16-1-2612 and N000147-14-1-0053)
Rubrene single crystal solar cells and the effect of crystallinity on interfacial recombination
Single crystal studies provide a better understanding of the basic properties of organic photovoltaic devices. Therefore, in this work, rubrene single crystals with a thickness of 250 nm to 1000 nm were used to produce an inverted bilayer organic solar cell. Subsequently, polycrystalline rubrene (orthorhombic, triclinic) and amorphous bilayer solar cells of the same thickness as single crystals were studied to make comparisons across platforms. To investigate how single crystal, polycrystalline (triclinic-orthorhombic) and amorphous forms alter the charge carrier recombination mechanism at the rubrene/PCBM interface, light intensity measurements were carried out. The light intensity dependency of the J(SC), V-OC and FF parameters in organic solar cells with different forms of rubrene was determined. Monomolecular (Shockley Read Hall) recombination is observed in devices employing amorphous and polycrystalline rubrene in addition to bimolecular recombination, whereas the single crystal device is weakly affected by trap assisted SRH recombination due to reduced trap states at the donor acceptor interface. To date, the proposed work is the only systematic study examining transport and interface recombination mechanisms in organic solar cells produced by different structure forms of rubrene.D. A. K. acknowledges the Turkey research fellowship (TUBITAK 2214/A-1059B141501315). K. K. thanks the Turkey Scholarship Council (2214/A-1059B141501316). B. G acknowledges the 1003 -Primary Subjects R;D Funding Program (218M940) and A. L. B. acknowledges the Office of Naval Research (N0001416-1-2612 and N000147-14-1-0053).Office of Naval Research [N0001416-1-2612, N000147-14-1-0053]; Turkey research fellowship [TUBITAK 2214/A-1059B141501315]; Turkey Scholarship Council [2214/A-1059B141501316]; 1003 -Primary Subjects R;D Funding Program [218M940
Surface Grafting of Functionalized Poly(thiophene)s Using Thiol–Ene Click Chemistry for Thin Film Stabilization
Regioregular
poly[(3-hexylthiophene)-<i>ran</i>-(3-undecenylthiophene)]
(pP3HT) and vinyl terminated poly(3-hexylthiophene) (xP3HT) were synthesized
by the McCullough method and surface grafted to thiol modified silicon
dioxide wafers using thiol–ene click chemistry. Utilizing this
method, semiconducting, solvent impervious films were easily generated.
Thiol–ene click chemistry is convenient for film stabilization
in electronics because it does not produce side products that could
be inimical to charge transport in the active layer. It was found
through grazing incidence wide-angle X-ray scattering (GIWAXS) that
there is no change in microstructure between as-spun films and thiol–ene
grafted films, while there was a change after the thiol–ene
grafted film was exposed to solvent. Organic field-effect transistors
(oFETs) were fabricated from grafted films that had been swelled with
chloroform, and these devices had mobilities on the order of 10<sup>–6</sup> cm<sup>2</sup> V<sup>–1</sup> s<sup>–1</sup>, which are consistent with poly(thiophene) monolayer devices
Controlling Conformations of Diketopyrrolopyrrole-Based Conjugated Polymers: Role of Torsional Angle
Transport of charge carriers through conjugated polymers is strongly influenced by the presence and distribution of structural disorders. In the present work, structural defects caused by the presence of torsional.. angle were investigated in a diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP)-based conjugated polymer. Two new copolymers of DPP were synthesized with varying torsional angles to trace the role of structural disorder. The optical properties of these copolymers in solution and thin film reveal the strong influence of torsional angle on their photophysical properties. A strong influence was observed on carrier transport properties of polymers in organic field-effect transistors (OFET) device geometry. The polymers based on phenyl DPP with higher torsional angle (PPTDPP-OD-TEG) resulted in high threshold voltage with less charge carrier mobility as compared to the polymer based on thiophene DPP (2DPP-OD-TEG) bearing a lower torsional angle. Carrier mobility and the molecular orientation of the conjugated polymers were correlated on the basis of grazing incidence X-ray scattering measurements showing the strong role of torsional angle introduced in the form of structural disorder. The results presented in this Article provide a deep insight into the sensitivity of structural disorder and its impact on the device performance of DPP-based conjugated polymers
Breaking the Bimolecular Crystal: The Effect of Side-Chain Length on Oligothiophene/Fullerene Intercalation
Polymer/fullerene
bimolecular crystal formation has been investigated
using a variety of conjugated polymers and fullerenes to understand
the design rules that influence donor–acceptor interaction.
Modifications of the polymer by varying the substitution side-chain
position, density, and branching have demonstrated the importance
of the “pocket” dimensions (free volume between side
chains where the fullerene resides) for controlling intercalation.
Yet the effect of pocket height has not been systematically explored
because of the solubility limitations in polymers. In this report,
we present an experimental investigation into the effect of the pocket
height by synthesizing poly[2,5-bis(3-<i>alkyl</i>thiophen-2-yl)thieno[3,2-<i>b</i>]thiophene] dimers with varied side chain lengths and track
the morphological changes of the dimer/fullerene blends using grazing-incidence
X-ray scattering, thermal measurements, and photoluminescence quenching.
We identify two regimes: (1) oligomers with side chains greater than
or equal to heptyl (C7) form bimolecular crystals and (2) oligomers
with less than or equal to hexyl (C6) form amorphous blends. This
work provides the first observation of an order-to-disorder transition
mediated by side-chain length in donor-fullerene intercalated blends
Controlling Conformations of Diketopyrrolopyrrole-Based Conjugated Polymers: Role of Torsional Angle
Transport of charge carriers through
conjugated polymers is strongly
influenced by the presence and distribution of structural disorders.
In the present work, structural defects caused by the presence of
torsional angle were investigated in a diketopyrrolopyrrole (<b>DPP</b>)-based conjugated polymer. Two new copolymers of <b>DPP</b> were synthesized with varying torsional angles to trace
the role of structural disorder. The optical properties of these copolymers
in solution and thin film reveal the strong influence of torsional
angle on their photophysical properties. A strong influence was observed
on carrier transport properties of polymers in organic field-effect
transistors (OFET) device geometry. The polymers based on phenyl DPP
with higher torsional angle (<b>PPTDPP</b>-OD-TEG) resulted
in high threshold voltage with less charge carrier mobility as compared
to the polymer based on thiophene DPP (<b>2DPP</b>-OD-TEG) bearing
a lower torsional angle. Carrier mobility and the molecular orientation
of the conjugated polymers were correlated on the basis of grazing
incidence X-ray scattering measurements showing the strong role of
torsional angle introduced in the form of structural disorder. The
results presented in this Article provide a deep insight into the
sensitivity of structural disorder and its impact on the device performance
of DPP-based conjugated polymers