Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Benjamin G. Steyer, Antonio S. Contreras, Duoduo Bao, and Valentine I. Vullev Department of Bioengineering University of California, Riverside.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Benjamin G. Steyer, Antonio S. Contreras, Duoduo Bao, and Valentine I. Vullev Department of Bioengineering University of California, Riverside."— Presentation transcript:

1 Benjamin G. Steyer, Antonio S. Contreras, Duoduo Bao, and Valentine I. Vullev Department of Bioengineering University of California, Riverside

2  Introduction to Vullev Group  Photoinduced charge transfer and its importance in photovoltaic devices  Charge transfer estimation and possible sources of error in its calculation  Isolate and investigate of two sources of error in the calculation of charge transfer driving force  Discuss the results of our experiments and future directions for our work

3  Microfluidics  Biosensing  Surface Chemistry  Charge Transfer ◦ Charge Transfer in Biomimetic and Bioinspired Systems.

4 E LUMO HOMO D A D* Locally excited (LE) state et E LUMO HOMO D+D+ A–A–   Charge transfer (CT) state Rehm-Weller Equation ΔGΔG

5  Better understanding of fundamental principles of charge transfer estimation  Isolation of several factors that may cause significant error in the estimation of charge transfer driving force. ◦ Solvent dependence (Wan Jiandi, et al)  Supporting electolyte concentration in determination of standard oxidation and reduction potentials (CV measurements)  Solvent dependence with respect to size of redox chromophore Wan, J. et al. Solvent dependence of the charge-transfer properties of a quaterthiophene- anthraquinone dyad. Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology. Feb 8, 2008.

6 Rehm-Weller Equation Born Correction Term ε D and ε A are the dielectric constants of the solutions in which donor and acceptor redox potentials were measured. ε is the dielectric constant of the media for which ΔGet is calculated and the spectroscopic measurements are conducted. Where and are the standard oxidation and reduction potentials for the donor and the acceptor. Eis the zero-to-zero energy of the principal chromophore. ΔGs and W are, respectively, the Born and Coulombic correction terms. Estimation of Charge Transfer Driving Force

7 Redox Properties of Ferrocene http://www.gamry.com/Products/DrBobsCell.htm  Cyclic voltammetry (CV) to determine the one- electron redox potentials of donor and acceptor species.  Ferrocene was chosen as a redox probe because of its well defined one-electron oxidation to a ferrocenium ion, and the relative stability of the ion.  Three organic solvents with different polarities were chosen (dichloromethane, acetonitrile, dimethylformamide)  CV measurements were taken of ferrocene in the three solvent media with supporting electrolyte concentrations of 1mM to 500mM Procedure Methods Ferrocene

8 Cyclic voltammograms for ferrocene (5 mM) in the presence of various concentrations of supporting electrolyte, TBATFB, for different solvents: (a) dichloromethane, (b) acetonitrile and (c) dimethylformamide.  Ferrocene’s oxidation potential can be reliably approximated to its half-wave potential, defined as the midpoint between the values of the potentials corresponding to the anodic and the cathodic peak in the cyclic voltammograms.  For each of the solvent media, an increase in the concentration of the electrolyte from 1 mM to 500 mM resulted in considerable shifts of the anodic peaks to less positive values. Results

9 Dependence of the half-wave oxidation potential of ferrocene,, on the concentration of the supporting electrolyte, CTBATFB, for three different solvents. Results  For all three solvent media, the increase in the TBATFB concentration shifted the oxidation potential toward more negative values.  This electrolyte-induced effect was most pronounced for the least-polar of the three solvent, CH 2 Cl 2

10  N-phenyl-4-dimethylamino-1,8-napthlimide (ANI-A) was used to estimate the dielectric constants of the dichloromethane solutions of the supporting electrolyte (TBATFB). ε D ε A Born Correction Term

11 Results Solvatochromism of AIN-A. Normalized fluorescence spectra of Ph-ANI for different solvents (10 μM Ph-ANI, ex = 410 nm). Dependence of the fluorescence maximum on the dielectric constant of the solvent: chloroform (CHCl3), dichloromethane (CH 2 Cl 2 ), benzonitrile (PhCN), acetonitrile (MeCN) and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO).

12 Dielectric Properties of CH 2 Cl 2 Electrolyte Solutions CTBATFB / mM ε 08.93 19.23 29.26 59.36 109.77 2010.5 5012.4 10014.1 20018.0 50024.2 Dielectric constants, ε, of CH 2 Cl 2 solutions containing TBATFB with different concentrations of a C TBATFB Dependence of the dielectric constant of the electrolyte solutions, on the electrolyte concentration, CTBATFB, presented logarithmically.  The increase in the electrolyte concentration causes close to a three-fold increase in the dielectric constant of the CH 2 Cl 2 solutions.

13 Conclusions Dependence of the half-wave oxidation potential of ferrocene on the concentration of the supporting electrolyte. The exponential data fits were performed for the concentration region between 20 mM and 500 mM TBATFB.  Dependence of redox potentials on the concentration of supporting electrolyte is significant for solutions composed of non-polar solutions (i.e. dichloromethane).  This contributes a significant source of error in the overall calculation of the overall charge transfer driving force.  Redox measurements conducted in polar solvents (i.e. acetonitrile and dimethylformamide), using approximations of the dielectric constants as those of the neat solvents do not contribute a large source of error to the calculation of the charge transfer driving force.

14 D A e–e– D +. A –. We predict that a smaller size chromophore will have less dependence on media polarity because there will be less surface area for solvent molecules to impede charge transfer

15  Synthesize chromophores with different sizes. ◦ AIN-A ◦ 6-Dimethylamino-2-phenyl-benzo[de]isoquinoline-1,3-dione (AIN-B) AIN-B AIN-A  Use cyclic voltammetry to determine the solvent dependence of oxidation potentials on the size of chromophores. ◦ CV of AIN-A and AIN-B taken at 50, 100, 200, and 500mM TBATFB concentrations

16 Synthesis of (ANI-A)  Synthesis of (ANI-A) was done using a two step reaction. The first portion of the reaction requires reaction of compound (a) in solvent (b) for 3 hours under argon atmosphere and water flux at 175°C. The second part of the reaction requires a 1:6 molar ratio of intermediate product (c) with compound (d) in propionic acid under argon and water reflux at 155°C for 48 hours. (e) N-phenyl-4-dimethylamino- 1,8-napthlimide (ANI-A) (a) 4-Bromo-1,8- napthalic anhydride (c) (d) Aniline(b) 3-Dimethyl- aminopropanenitrile Propionic acid 155°C

17 AIN-A NMR in DMSO

18 (c) (e) hexylamine (AIN-B)  Synthesis of (ANI-B) was also completed using a two step reaction. The first portion of the reaction requires reaction of compound (a) in solvent (b) for 3 hours under argon atmosphere and water flux at 175°C. The second part of the reaction requires a 1:6 molar ratio of intermediate product (c) with solvent (e) in DME at 90°C under argon and water reflux for 12 hours. (a) 4-Bromo-1,8- napthalic anhydride (c) (b) 3-Dimethyl- aminopropanenitrile

19 AIN-B

20 CV taken of AIN-A at supporting electrolyte concentrations of 50,100,200,500mM. CV taken of AIN-B at supporting electrolyte concentrations of 50,100,200,500mM.  Data shows expected trends  Increase in TBATFB concentration causes anodic peaks to move towards more positive values and cathodic peaks to move toward more negative values

21 Dependence of the half-wave oxidation potential of ferrocene,, on the concentration of the supporting electrolyte, CTBATFB, for three different solvents. The relationship between the half-wave reduction potential and the concentration of the supporting electrolyte, CTBATFB, for two different chromophores with different molecular sizes  For all three solvent media, the increase in the TBATFB concentration shifted the oxidation potential toward more negative values.  The size difference between the two chromophores shows that AIN-B, the smaller of the chromophores, has less dependence on salt on changes in salt concentration. More data is needed to confirm this result.

22  More data needs to be collected to examine the relationship between size and solvent dependency.  Synthesize larger chromophores  Implement knowledge in the engineering of novel redox chromophores with application in more efficient photovoltaic devices. Perylene Derivatives

23  Special thanks to Duoduo Bao, Antonio Contreras, Alex Gerasimenko Dr. Vullev, as well as Jun Wang and the BRITE Program


Download ppt "Benjamin G. Steyer, Antonio S. Contreras, Duoduo Bao, and Valentine I. Vullev Department of Bioengineering University of California, Riverside."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google