15 research outputs found

    Improved performance of porphyrin-based dye sensitised solar cells by phosphinic acid surface treatment

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    Chemical surface treatment of porphyrin-sensitised titania films using bis-(4-methoxyphenyl) phosphinic acid after dye adsorption, results in large improvements in DSSC efficiencies which originate primarily from higher short circuit currents. The result was attributed to a positive shift in the TiO2 quasi-Fermi level with simultaneous retardation of charge recombination. High device performances have been achieved even using simplified electrolyte matrices devoid of the common additives, LiI and t-butylpyridine

    Nanometer-thick films of antimony oxide nanoparticles grafted on defective graphenes as heterogeneous base catalysts for coupling reactions

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    Films of few-layers defective N-doped or undoped graphene (10–15 nm) containing antimony oxide nanoparticles (15–30 nm) have been prepared on quartz by pyrolysis of alginate or chitosan adsorbing Sb(OAc). XPS shows that the prevalent Sb oxidation state is +III, while thermoprogrammed CO desorption shows that these films exhibit basic sites. These thin films have used as basic catalysts to promote the Michael addition of active methylene compounds and the Henry condensation. These results have been rationalized by DFT calculations that have shown that undercoordinated or two-fold coordinated oxygen atoms on SbOx clusters can act as basic sites, providing a wide range of basic strength.This work was supported by UEFISCDI (PN-III-P4-ID-PCE-2016-0146, nr. 121/2017 and project number PN-III-P1-1.1-TE-2016-2191, nr. 89/2018) and by the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation (Severo Ochoa and RTI2018-890237-CO2-1)

    Influence of the solvent and metal center on supramolecular chirality induction with bisporphyrin tweezer receptors. Strong metal modulation of effective molarity values.

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    We describe the synthesis of a bisporphyrin tweezer receptor 1·H(4) and its metalation with Zn(II) and Rh(III) cations. We report the thermodynamic characterization of the supramolecular chirality induction process that takes place when the metalated bisporphyrin receptors coordinate to enantiopure 1,2-diaminocyclohexane in two different solvents, toluene and dichloromethane. We also performed a thorough study of several simpler systems that were used as models for the thermodynamic characterization of the more complex bisporphyrin systems. The initial complexation of the chiral diamine with the bisporphyrins produces a 1:1 sandwich complex that opens up to yield a simple 1:2 complex in the presence of excess diamine. The CD spectra associated with the 1:1 and 1:2 complexes of both metalloporphyrins, 1·Zn(2) and 1·Rh(2), display bisignate Cotton effects when the chirogenesis process is studied in toluene solutions. On the contrary, in dichloromethane solutions, only 1·Zn(2) yields CD-active 1:1 and 1:2 complexes, while the 1:2 complex of 1·Rh(2) is CD-silent. In both solvents, porphyrin 1·Zn(2) features a stoichiometrically controlled chirality inversion process, which is the sign of the Cotton effect of the 1:1 complex is opposite to that of the 1:2 complex. In contrast, porphyrin 1·Rh(2) affords 1:1 and 1:2 complexes in toluene solutions with the same sign for their CD couplets. Interestingly, in both solvents, the signs of the CD couplets associated with the 1:1 sandwich complexes of 1·Zn(2) and 1·Rh(2) are opposite. The amplitudes of the CD couplets are higher for 1·Zn(2) than for 1·Rh(2). This observation is in agreement with 1·Rh(2) having a smaller extinction coefficient than 1·Zn(2). We performed DFT-based calculations and assigned molecular structures to the 1:1 and 1:2 complexes that explain the observed signs for their CD couplets. Unexpectedly, the quantification of the thermodynamic stability of the two metallobisporphyrin/diamine 1:1 sandwich complexes revealed the existence of interplay between effective molarity values (EM) and the strength of the intermolecular interaction (K(m); N···Zn or N···Rh) used in their assembly. The EM for the N···Rh(III) intramolecular interaction is 3 orders of magnitude smaller than that for the N···Zn(II) interaction, both of which are embedded in the same scaffold of the 1·M(2) bisporphyrin receptor
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