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1.
J Am Chem Soc ; 2023 Nov 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37933117

ABSTRACT

A key conundrum of biomolecular electronics is efficient electron transport (ETp) through solid-state junctions up to 10 nm, often without temperature activation. Such behavior challenges known charge transport mechanisms, especially via nonconjugated molecules such as proteins. Single-step, coherent quantum-mechanical tunneling proposed for ETp across small protein, 2-3 nm wide junctions, but it is problematic for larger proteins. Here we exploit the ability of bacteriorhodopsin (bR), a well-studied, 4-5 nm long membrane protein, to assemble into well-defined single and multiple bilayers, from ∼9 to 60 nm thick, to investigate ETp limits as a function of junction width. To ensure sufficient signal/noise, we use large area (∼10-3 cm2) Au-protein-Si junctions. Photoemission spectra indicate a wide energy separation between electrode Fermi and the nearest protein-energy levels, as expected for a polymer of mostly saturated components. Junction currents decreased exponentially with increasing junction width, with uniquely low length-decay constants (0.05-0.5 nm-1). Remarkably, even for the widest junctions, currents are nearly temperature-independent, completely so below 160 K. While, among other things, the lack of temperature-dependence excludes, hopping as a plausible mechanism, coherent quantum-mechanical tunneling over 60 nm is physically implausible. The results may be understood if ETp is limited by injection into one of the contacts, followed by more efficient charge propagation across the protein. Still, the electrostatics of the protein films further limit the number of charge carriers injected into the protein film. How electron transport across dozens of nanometers of protein layers is more efficient than injection defines a riddle, requiring further study.

2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 145(32): 18075-18083, 2023 Aug 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37529898

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate here the assembly of a nanolayer of electrochromic iron complexes on the top of composite layers of cobalt and ruthenium complexes. Depending on the ratio of the latter two complexes, we can tailor materials that show different electron transport pathways, redox activities, and color transitions. No redox activity of the top layer, consisting of iron complexes, is observable when the relative amount of the ruthenium complexes is low in the underlying composite layer because of the insulating properties of the isostructural cobalt complexes. Increasing the amount of ruthenium complexes opens an electron transport channel, resulting in charge storage in both the cobalt and iron complexes. The trapped charges can be chemically released by redox-active ferrocyanide complexes at the film-water interface.

3.
Polymers (Basel) ; 15(14)2023 Jul 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37514450

ABSTRACT

The effect of semiconducting tungsten disulfide (WS2) nanoparticles (NPs), functionalized by either methacryloxy, glycidyl, vinyl, or amino silanes, has been studied in photocuring of acrylate and epoxy resins (the latter photocured according to a cationic mechanism). The curing time, degree of curing (DC), thermal effects, and mechanical properties of the radiation-cured resins were investigated. X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) analyses confirmed that a silane coating was formed (1-4 nm) on the NPs' surface having a thickness of 1-4 nm. Fourier transition infrared (FTIR) was used to determine the DC of the nanocomposite resin. The curing time of the epoxy resin, at 345-385 nm wavelength, was 10 to 20 s, while for acrylate, the curing time was 7.5 min, reaching 92% DC in epoxy and 84% in acrylate. The glass transition temperature (Tg) of the photocured acrylates in the presence of WS2 NPs increased. In contrast to the acrylate, the epoxy displayed no significant variations of the Tg. It was found that the silane surface treatments enhanced the DC. Significant increases in impact resistance and enhancement in shear adhesion strength were observed when the NPs were treated with vinyl silane. A previous study has shown that the addition of WS2 NPs at a concentration of 0.5 wt.% is the optimal loading for improving the resin's mechanical properties. This study supports these earlier findings not only for the unmodified NPs but also for those functionalized with silane moieties. This study opens new vistas for the photocuring of resins and polymers in general when incorporating WS2 NPs.

4.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 15(19): 23908-23921, 2023 May 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37133217

ABSTRACT

Two-dimensional (2D) halide perovskites, HaPs, can provide chemical stability to three-dimensional (3D) HaP surfaces, protecting them from exposure to ambient species and from reacting with contacting layers. Both actions occur with 2D HaPs, with the general stoichiometry R2PbI4 (R: long or bulky organic amine) covering the 3D ones. Adding such covering films can also boost power conversion efficiencies of photovoltaic cells by passivating surface/interface trap states. For maximum benefit, we need conformal ultrathin and phase-pure (n = 1) 2D layers to enable efficient tunneling of photogenerated charge carriers through the 2D film barrier. Conformal coverage of ultrathin (<10 nm) R2PbI4 layers on 3D perovskites is challenging with spin coating; even more so is its upscaling for larger-area devices. We report on vapor-phase cation exchange of the 3D surface with the R2PbI4 molecules and real-time in situ growth monitoring by photoluminescence (PL) to determine limits for forming ultrathin 2D layers. We characterize the 2D growth stages, following the changing PL intensity-time profiles, by combining structural, optical, morphological, and compositional characterizations. Moreover, from quantitative X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) analysis on 2D/3D bilayer films, we estimate the smallest width of a 2D cover that we can grow to be <5 nm, roughly the limit for efficient tunneling through a (semi)conjugated organic barrier. We also find that, besides protecting the 3D against ambient humidity-induced degradation, the ultrathin 2D-on-3D film also aids self-repair following photodamage.

5.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 14(12): 2973-2982, 2023 Mar 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36940422

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate that the direction of current rectification via one of nature's most efficient light-harvesting systems, the photosystem 1 complex (PS1), can be controlled by its orientation on Au substrates. Molecular self-assembly of the PS1 complex using four different linkers with distinct functional head groups that interact by electrostatic and hydrogen bonds with different surface parts of the entire protein PS1 complex was used to tailor the PS1 orientation. We observe an orientation-dependent rectification in the current-voltage characteristics for linker/PS1 molecule junctions. Results of an earlier study using a surface two-site PS1 mutant complex having its orientation set by covalent binding to the Au substrate supports our conclusion. Current-voltage-temperature measurements on the linker/PS1 complex indicate off-resonant tunneling as the main electron transport mechanism. Our ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy results highlight the importance of the protein orientation for the energy level alignment and provide insight into the charge transport mechanism via the PS1 transport chain.


Subject(s)
Photosystem I Protein Complex , Photosystem I Protein Complex/chemistry , Electron Transport
6.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(47): 28878-28885, 2022 Dec 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36441625

ABSTRACT

A way of modulating the solid-state electron transport (ETp) properties of oligopeptide junctions is presented by charges and internal hydrogen bonding, which affect this process markedly. The ETp properties of a series of tyrosine (Tyr)-containing hexa-alanine peptides, self-assembled in monolayers and sandwiched between gold electrodes, are investigated in response to their protonation state. Inserting a Tyr residue into these peptides enhances the ETp carried via their junctions. Deprotonation of the Tyr-containing peptides causes a further increase of ETp efficiency that depends on this residue's position. Combined results of molecular dynamics simulations and spectroscopic experiments suggest that the increased conductance upon deprotonation is mainly a result of enhanced coupling between the charged C-terminus carboxylate group and the adjacent Au electrode. Moreover, intra-peptide hydrogen bonding of the Tyr hydroxyl to the C-terminus carboxylate reduces this coupling. Hence, the extent of such a conductance change depends on the Tyr-carboxylate distance in the peptide's sequence.


Subject(s)
Alanine , Tyrosine , Hydrogen Bonding , Electron Transport , Peptides
7.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(34): e202205238, 2022 Aug 22.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35594390

ABSTRACT

We show that metal-organic frameworks, based on tetrahedral pyridyl ligands, can be used as a morphological and structural template to form a series of isostructural crystals having different metal ions and properties. An iterative crystal-to-crystal conversion has been demonstrated by consecutive cation exchanges. The primary manganese-based crystals are characterized by an uncommon space group (P622). The packing includes chiral channels that can mediate the cation exchange, as indicated by energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy on microtome-sectioned crystals. The observed cation exchange is in excellent agreement with the Irving-Williams series (MnZn) associated with the relative stability of the resulting coordination nodes. Furthermore, we demonstrate how the metal cation controls the optical and magnetic properties. The crystals maintain their morphology, allowing a quantitative comparison of their properties at both the ensemble and single-crystal level.

8.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(17): e202115930, 2022 04 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35187784

ABSTRACT

In nature, simple organisms evolved mechanisms to form intricate biosilica nanostructures, far exceeding current synthetic manufacturing. Based on the properties of extracted biomacromolecules, polycation-polyanion pairs were suggested as moderators of biosilica formation. However, the chemical principles of this polymer-induced silicification remain unclear. Here, we used a biomimetic polycation-polyanion system to study polymer-induced silicification. We demonstrate that it is the polymer phase separation process, rather than silica-polymer interactions, which controls silica precipitation. Since ionic strength controls this electrostatic phase separation, it can be used to tune the morphology and structure of the precipitates. In situ cryo electron microscopy highlights the pivotal role of the hydrated polymer condensates in this process. These results pave the road for developing nanoscale morphologies of bioinspired silica based on the chemistry of liquid-liquid phase separation.


Subject(s)
Nanostructures , Polymers , Biomimetics , Polymers/chemistry , Silicon Dioxide/chemistry , Static Electricity
9.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(7): 8461-8473, 2021 Feb 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33565313

ABSTRACT

The electrochemical urea oxidation reaction (UOR) is considered as a promising renewable source for harvesting energy from waste. We report a new synthetic design approach to produce an iron-nickel alloy nanocatalyst from a metal-organic polymer (MOP) by a single-step carbonization process at 500 °C, thus forming a core-shell of iron-nickel-coated carbon (C@FeNi) nanostructures wired by embedded carbon nanotubes (CNTs) (CNT/C@FeNi). Powder X-ray diffraction confirmed the formation of metallic FeNi3 alloy nanoparticles (∼20 to 28 nm). Our experimental results showed that MOP containing CNTs acquired an interconnected hierarchical topology, which prevented the collapse of its microstructure during pyrolysis. Hence, CNT/C@FeNi shows higher porosity (10 times) than C@FeNi. The electrochemical UOR in alkaline electrolytes on these catalysts was studied using cyclic voltammetry (CV). The result showed a higher anodic current (3.5 mA cm-2) for CNT/C@FeNi than for C@FeNi (1.1 mA cm-2) at 1.5 V/RHE. CNT/C@FeNi displayed good stability in chronoamperometry experiments and a lower Tafel slope (33 mV dec-1) than C@FeNi (41.1 mV dec-1). In this study, CNT/C@FeNi exhibits higher exchange current density (3.2 µA cm-2) than does C@FeNi (2 µA cm-2). The reaction rate orders of CNT/C@FeNi and C@FeNi at a kinetically controlled potential of 1.4 V/RHE were 0.5 and 0.9, respectively, higher than the 0.26 of ß-Ni(OH)2, Ni/Ni(OH)2 electrodes. The electrochemical impedance result showed a lower charge-transfer resistance for CNT/C@FeNi (61 Ω·cm-2) than for C@FeNi (162 Ω·cm-2), due to faster oxidation kinetics associated with the CNT linkage. Moreover, CNT/C@FeNi exhibited a lower Tafel slope and resistance and higher heterogeneity (25.2 × 10-5 cm s-1), as well as relatively high faradic efficiency (68.4%) compared to C@FeNi (56%). Thus, the carbon-coated FeNi3 core connected by CNT facilitates lower charge-transfer resistance and reduces the UOR overpotential.

10.
J Am Chem Soc ; 142(45): 19217-19225, 2020 11 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33141577

ABSTRACT

We observe reversible, bias-induced switching of conductance via a blue copper protein azurin mutant, N42C Az, with a nearly 10-fold increase at |V| > 0.8 V than at lower bias. No such switching is found for wild-type azurin, WT Az, up to |1.2 V|, beyond which irreversible changes occur. The N42C Az mutant will, when positioned between electrodes in a solid-state Au-protein-Au junction, have an orientation opposite that of WT Az with respect to the electrodes. Current(s) via both proteins are temperature-independent, consistent with quantum mechanical tunneling as dominant transport mechanism. No noticeable difference is resolved between the two proteins in conductance and inelastic electron tunneling spectra at <|0.5 V| bias voltages. Switching behavior persists from 15 K up to room temperature. The conductance peak is consistent with the system switching in and out of resonance with the changing bias. With further input from UV photoemission measurements on Au-protein systems, these striking differences in conductance are rationalized by having the location of the Cu(II) coordination sphere in the N42C Az mutant, proximal to the (larger) substrate-electrode, to which the protein is chemically bound, while for the WT Az that coordination sphere is closest to the other Au electrode, with which only physical contact is made. Our results establish the key roles that a protein's orientation and binding nature to the electrodes play in determining the electron transport tunnel barrier.


Subject(s)
Azurin/metabolism , Azurin/chemistry , Azurin/genetics , Copper/chemistry , Electrodes , Electron Transport , Gold/chemistry , Gold/metabolism , Mutagenesis , Photoelectron Spectroscopy , Protein Binding , Quantum Theory , Temperature
11.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 12(10): 12353-12361, 2020 Mar 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32045207

ABSTRACT

We report on the chemical and electronic structure of cesium tin bromide (CsSnBr3) and how it is impacted by the addition of 20 mol % tin fluoride (SnF2) to the precursor solution, using both surface-sensitive lab-based soft X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and near-surface bulk-sensitive synchrotron-based hard XPS (HAXPES). To determine the reproducibility and reliability of conclusions, several (nominally identically prepared) sample sets were investigated. The effects of deposition reproducibility, handling, and transport are found to cause significant changes in the measured properties of the films. Variations in the HAXPES-derived compositions between individual sample sets were observed, but in general, they confirm that the addition of 20 mol % SnF2 improves coverage of the titanium dioxide substrate by CsSnBr3 and decreases the oxidation of SnII to SnIV while also suppressing formation of secondary Br and Cs species. Furthermore, the (surface) composition is found to be Cs-deficient and Sn-rich compared to the nominal stoichiometry. The valence band (VB) shows a SnF2-induced redistribution of Sn 5s-derived density of states, reflecting the changing SnII/SnIV ratio. Notwithstanding some variability in the data, we conclude that SnF2 addition decreases the energy difference between the VB maximum of CsSnBr3 and the Fermi level, which we explain by defect chemistry considerations.

12.
ACS Appl Bio Mater ; 2(2): 856-864, 2019 Feb 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35016289

ABSTRACT

To facilitate the implementation of biosensors based on the localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) of metal nanostructures, there is a great need for cost-efficient, flexible, and tunable methods for producing plasmonic coatings. Due to its simplicity and excellent conformity, electroless plating (EP) is well suited for this task. However, it is traditionally optimized to produce continuous metal films, which cannot be employed in LSPR sensors. Here, we outline the development of an EP strategy for depositing island-like silver nanoparticle (NP) films on glass with distinct LSPR bands. The fully wet-chemical process only employs standard chemicals and proceeds within minutes at room temperature. The key step for producing spread-out NP films is an accelerated ripening of the silver seed layer in diluted hydrochloric acid, which reduces the nucleation density during plating. The reaction kinetics and mechanisms are investigated with scanning (transmission) electron microscopy (SEM/STEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS), and UV-vis spectroscopy, with the latter enabling a convenient live monitoring of the deposition, allowing its termination at a stage of desired optical properties. The sensing capabilities of chemically deposited NP films as LSPR transducers are exemplified in DNA biosensing. To this end, a sensing interface is prepared using layer-by-layer (LbL) buildup of polyelectrolytes (PE), followed by adsorption and covalent immobilization of ssDNA. The obtained LSPR transducers demonstrate robustness and selectivity in sensing experiments with binding complementary and unrelated DNA strands.

13.
Adv Mater ; 30(51): e1805179, 2018 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30345718

ABSTRACT

Due to their distinctive electronic, optical, and chemical properties, metal nanoplates represent important building blocks for creating functional superstructures. Here, a general deposition method for synthesizing Ag nanoplate architectures, which is compatible with a wide substrate range (flexible, curved, or recessed; consisting of carbon, silicon, metals, oxides, or polymers) is reported. By adjusting the reaction conditions, nucleation can be triggered in the bulk solution, on seeds and by electrodeposition, allowing the production of nanoplate suspensions as well as direct surface modification with open-porous nanoplate films. The latter are fully percolated, possess a large, easily accessible surface, a defined nanostructure with {111} basal planes, and expose defect-rich, particularly reactive edges in high density, making them compelling platforms for heterogeneous catalysis, and electro- and flow chemistry. This potential is showcased by exploring the catalytic performance of the nanoplates in the reduction of carbon dioxide, 4-nitrophenol, and hydrogen peroxide, devising two types of microreactors, and by tuning the nanoplate functionality with derivatization reactions.

14.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 10(48): 41599-41607, 2018 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30376633

ABSTRACT

Different batches of Si wafers with nominally the same specifications were found to respond differently to identical chemical surface treatments aimed at regrowing Si oxide on them. We found that the oxides produced on different batches of wafer differ electrically, thereby affecting solid-state electron transport (ETp) via protein films assembled on them. These results led to the another set of experiments, where we studied this phenomenon using two distinct chemical methods to regrow oxides on the same batch of Si wafers. We have characterized the surfaces of the regrown oxides and of monolayers of linker molecules that connect proteins with the oxides and examined ETp via ultrathin layers of the protein bacteriorhodopsin, assembled on them. Our results illustrate the crucial role of (near) surface charges on the substrate in defining the ETp characteristics across the proteins. This is expressed most strikingly in the observed current's temperature dependences, and we propose that these are governed by the electrostatic landscape at the electrode-protein interface rather than by intrinsic protein properties. This study's major finding, relevant to protein bioelectronics, is that protein-electrode coupling in junctions is a decisive factor in ETp across them. Hence,surface electrostatics can create a barrier that dominates charge transport and controls the transport mode across the junction. Our findings' wider importance lies in their relevance to hybrid junctions of Si with (polyelectrolyte) biomolecules, a likely direction for future bioelectronics. A remarkable corollary of presented results is that once an electron is injected into the protein, transport within the proteins is so efficient that it does not encounter a measurable barrier down to 160 K.


Subject(s)
Bacteriorhodopsins/chemistry , Electron Transport , Surface Properties
15.
J Am Chem Soc ; 140(41): 13317-13326, 2018 10 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30235415

ABSTRACT

Making biomolecular electronics a reality will require control over charge transport across biomolecules. Here we show that chemical modulation of the coupling between one of the electronic contacts and the biomolecules in a solid-state junction allows controlling electron transport (ETp) across the junction. Employing the protein azurin (Az), we achieve such modulation as follows: Az is covalently bound by Au-S bonding to a lithographically prepared Au electrode (Au-Az). Au nanowires (AuNW) onto which linker molecules, with free carboxylic group, are bound via Au-S bonds serve as top electrode. Current-voltage plots of AuNW-linkerCOOH//Az-Au junctions have been shown earlier to exhibit step-like features, due to resonant tunneling through discrete Az energy levels. Forming an amide bond between the free carboxylic group of the AuNW-bound linker and Az yields AuNW-linkerCO-NH-Az-Au junctions. This Az-linker bond switches the ETp mechanism from resonant to off-resonant tunneling. By varying the extent of this amide bonding, the current-voltage dependence can be controlled between these two mechanisms, thus providing a platform for altering and controlling the ETp mechanism purely by chemical modification in a two-terminal device, i.e., without a gate electrode. Using results from conductance, including the energy barrier and electrode-molecule coupling parameters extracted from current-voltage fitting and normalized differential conductance analysis and from inelastic-electron-tunneling and photoelectron spectroscopies, we determine the Az frontier orbital energies, with respect to the Au Fermi level, for four junction configurations, differing only in electrode-protein coupling. Our approach and findings open the way to both qualitative and quantitative control of biomolecular electronic junctions.

16.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 57(29): 8871-8874, 2018 Jul 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29862609

ABSTRACT

An amphiphile based on polyethylene glycol (PEG) polymer and two molecular moieties (perylene diimide and C7 fluoroalkyl, PDI and C7 F) attached to its termini assembles into crystalline films with long-range order. The films reversibly switch from crystalline to amorphous above the PEG melting temperature. The adaptive behavior stems from the responsiveness of the PEG domain and the robustness of the PDI and C7 F assemblies. The hydrophobicity of the film can be controlled by heating, resulting in switching from highly hydrophobic to superhydrophilic. The long-range order, reversible crystallinity switching, and the temperature-controlled wettability demonstrate the potential of block copolymer analogues based on simple polymeric/molecular hybrids.

17.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 20(10): 6860-6867, 2018 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29468242

ABSTRACT

Peptide-based molecular electronic devices are promising due to the large diversity and unique electronic properties of biomolecules. These electronic properties can change considerably with peptide structure, allowing diverse design possibilities. In this work, we explore the effect of the side-chain of the peptide on its electronic properties, by using both experimental and computational tools to detect the electronic energy levels of two model peptides. The peptides include 2Ala and 2Trp as well as their 3-mercaptopropionic acid linker which is used to form monolayers on an Au surface. Specifically, we compare experimental ultraviolet photoemission spectroscopy measurements with density functional theory based computational results. By analyzing differences in frontier energy levels and molecular orbitals between peptides in gas-phase and in a monolayer on gold, we find that the electronic properties of the peptide side-chain are maintained during binding of the peptide to the gold substrate. This indicates that the energy barrier for the peptide electron transport can be tuned by the amino acid compositions, which suggests a route for structural design of peptide-based electronic devices.


Subject(s)
Dipeptides/chemistry , Molecular Dynamics Simulation , 3-Mercaptopropionic Acid/chemistry , Adsorption , Amino Acids/chemistry , Electron Transport , Electrons , Gases , Gold/chemistry , Molecular Conformation , Surface Properties , Ultraviolet Rays
18.
Adv Mater ; 30(2)2018 Jan.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29171679

ABSTRACT

Organic crystalline materials are used as dyes/pigments, pharmaceuticals, and active components of photonic and electronic devices. There is great interest in integrating organic crystals with inorganic and carbon nanomaterials to create nanocomposites with enhanced properties. Such efforts are hampered by the difficulties in interfacing organic crystals with dissimilar materials. Here, an approach that employs organic nanocrystallization is presented to fabricate solution-processed organic nanocrystal/carbon nanotube (ONC/CNT) hybrid materials based on readily available organic dyes (perylene diimides (PDIs)) and carbon nanotubes. The hybrids are prepared by self-assembly in aqueous media to afford free-standing films with tunable CNT content. These exhibit excellent conductivities (as high as 5.78 ± 0.56 S m-1 ), and high thermal stability that are superior to common polymer/CNT hybrids. The color of the hybrids can be tuned by adding various PDI derivatives. ONC/CNT hybrids represent a novel class of nanocomposites, applicable as optoelectronic and conductive colorant materials.

19.
Nanoscale ; 9(34): 12573-12589, 2017 Aug 31.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28820220

ABSTRACT

Oxidation and corrosion reactions have a major effect on the application of non-noble metals. Kinetic information and simple theoretical models are often insufficient for describing such processes in metals at the nanoscale, particularly in cases involving formation of internal voids (nano Kirkendall effect, NKE) during oxidation. Here we study the kinetics of solid-state oxidation of chemically-grown copper nanoparticles (NPs) by in situ localized surface plasmon resonance (LSPR) spectroscopy during isothermal annealing in the range 110-170 °C. We show that LSPR spectroscopy is highly effective in kinetic studies of such systems, enabling convenient in situ real-time measurements during oxidation. Change of the LSPR spectra throughout the oxidation follows a common pattern, observed for different temperatures, NP sizes and substrates. The well-defined initial Cu NP surface plasmon (SP) band red-shifts continuously with oxidation, while the extinction intensity initially increases to reach a maximum value at a characteristic oxidation time τ, after which the SP intensity continuously drops. The characteristic time τ is used as a scaling parameter for the kinetic analysis. Evolution of the SP wavelength and extinction intensity during oxidation at different temperatures follows the same kinetics when the oxidation time is normalized to τ, thus pointing to a general oxidation mechanism. The characteristic time τ is used to estimate the activation energy of the process, determined to be 144 ± 6 kJ mol-1, similar to previously reported values for high-temperature Cu thermal oxidation. The central role of the NKE in the solid-state oxidation process is revealed by electron microscopy, while formation of Cu2O as the major oxidation product is established by X-ray diffraction, XPS, and electrochemical measurements. The results indicate a transition of the oxidation mechanism from a Valensi-Carter (VC) to NKE mechanism with the degree of oxidation. To interpret the optical evolution during oxidation, Mie scattering solutions for metal core-oxide shell spherical particles are computed, considering formation of Kirkendall voids. The model calculations are in agreement with the experimental results, showing that the large red-shift of the LSPR band during oxidation is the result of Kirkendall voiding, thus establishing the major role of the NKE in determining the optical behavior of such systems.

20.
J Am Chem Soc ; 139(33): 11471-11481, 2017 08 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28702992

ABSTRACT

In this study, we demonstrate a versatile approach for the formation of electrochromic nanoscale assemblies on transparent conductive oxides on both rigid and flexible substrates. Our method is based on the application of alternating spin-coated layers of well-defined metal polypyridyl complexes and a palladium(II) salt to form electrochemically addressable films with a high chromophore density. By varying the central metal ion of the polypyridyl complexes (Os, Ru, and Fe) and their ligands and by mixing these complexes, coatings with a wide range of colors can be achieved. These coatings cover a large area of RGB color space. The coloration intensities of these nanoscale films can be tuned by the number of deposition steps. The materials have very attractive ON/OFF ratios, electrochemical stabilities, and coloration efficiencies. Reversible color-to-colorless and color-to-color transitions were demonstrated, and the films were further integrated into sandwich cells.


Subject(s)
Coloring Agents/chemistry , Coordination Complexes/chemistry , Electrochemical Techniques/instrumentation , Oxides/chemistry , Polymers/chemistry , Color , Electric Conductivity , Electrochemistry , Equipment Design , Iron/chemistry , Osmium/chemistry , Palladium/chemistry , Ruthenium/chemistry , Surface Properties
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