15 research outputs found
Synthesis of Polyyne Rotaxanes
Active-metal templating has been used to synthesize rotaxanes consisting of a phenanthroline-based macrocycle threaded around a C8, C12, or C20 polyyne chain. The crystal structure of the C12 rotaxane has been determined. In the rhenium(I) carbonyl complex of this rotaxane, with Re(CO)<sub>3</sub>Cl coordinated to the phenanthroline macrocycle, the proximity of the polyyne chain quenches the luminescence of the rhenium. These rotaxanes offer a new approach to controlling the environment and interactions of a polyyne chain
Synthesis of Polyyne Rotaxanes
Active-metal templating has been used to synthesize rotaxanes consisting of a phenanthroline-based macrocycle threaded around a C8, C12, or C20 polyyne chain. The crystal structure of the C12 rotaxane has been determined. In the rhenium(I) carbonyl complex of this rotaxane, with Re(CO)<sub>3</sub>Cl coordinated to the phenanthroline macrocycle, the proximity of the polyyne chain quenches the luminescence of the rhenium. These rotaxanes offer a new approach to controlling the environment and interactions of a polyyne chain
Optimizing the Energy Offset between Dye and Hole-Transporting Material in Solid-State Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells
The
power-conversion efficiency of solid-state dye-sensitized solar
cells can be optimized by reducing the energy offset between the highest
occupied molecular orbital (HOMO) levels of dye and hole-transporting
material (HTM) to minimize the loss-in-potential. Here, we report
a study of three novel HTMs with HOMO levels slightly above and below
the one of the commonly used HTM 2,2′,7,7′- tetrakis(<i>N</i>,<i>N</i>-di-<i>p</i>-methoxyphenylamino)-9,9′-spirobifluorene
(spiro-OMeTAD) to systematically explore this possibility. Using transient
absorption spectroscopy and employing the ruthenium based dye Z907
as sensitizer, it is shown that, despite one new HTM showing a 100%
hole-transfer yield, all devices based on the new HTMs performed worse
than those incorporating spiro-OMeTAD. We further demonstrate that
the design of the HTM has an additional impact on the electronic density
of states present at the TiO<sub>2</sub> electrode surface and hence
influences not only hole- but also electron-transfer from the sensitizer.
These results provide insight into the complex influence of the HTM
on charge transfer and provide guidance for the molecular design of
new materials
Structure-directed exciton dynamics in templated molecular nanorings
Conjugated polymers with cyclic structures are interesting because their symmetry leads to unique electronic properties. Recent advances in Vernier templating now allow large shape-persistent fully conjugated porphyrin nanorings to be synthesized, exhibiting unique electronic properties. We examine the impact of different conformations on exciton delocalization and emission depolarization in a range of different porphyrin nanoring topologies with comparable spatial extent. Low photoluminescence anisotropy values are found to occur within the first few hundred femtoseconds after pulsed excitation, suggesting ultrafast delocalization of excitons across the nanoring structures. Molecular dynamics simulations show that further polarization memory loss is caused by out-of-plane distortions associated with twisting and bending of the templated nanoring topologies
Ultrafast energy transfer in biomimetic multistrand nanorings.
We report the synthesis of LH2-like supramolecular double- and triple-stranded complexes based upon porphyrin nanorings. Energy transfer from the antenna dimers to the π-conjugated nanoring occurs on a subpicosecond time scale, rivaling transfer rates in natural light-harvesting systems. The presence of a second nanoring acceptor doubles the transfer rate, providing strong evidence for multidirectional energy funneling. The behavior of these systems is particularly intriguing because the local nature of the interaction may allow energy transfer into states that are, for cyclic nanorings, symmetry-forbidden in the far field. These complexes are versatile synthetic models for natural light-harvesting systems