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1.
Nat Chem ; 15(8): 1172-1178, 2023 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37308710

ABSTRACT

Hybrid structures formed between organic molecules and inorganic quantum dots can accomplish unique photophysical transformations by taking advantage of their disparate properties. The electronic coupling between these materials is typically weak, leading photoexcited charge carriers to spatially localize to the dot or to a molecule at its surface. However, we show that by converting a chemical linker that covalently binds anthracene molecules to silicon quantum dots from a carbon-carbon single bond to a double bond, we access a strong coupling regime where excited carriers spatially delocalize across both anthracene and silicon. By pushing the system to delocalize, we design a photon upconversion system with a higher efficiency (17.2%) and lower threshold intensity (0.5 W cm-2) than that of a corresponding weakly coupled system. Our results show that strong coupling between molecules and nanostructures achieved through targeted linking chemistry provides a complementary route for tailoring properties in materials for light-driven applications.

2.
Nanoscale ; 14(46): 17385-17391, 2022 Dec 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36382630

ABSTRACT

Photon upconversion in systems incorporating inorganic quantum dots (QDs) is of great interest for applications in solar energy conversion, bioimaging, and photodynamic therapy. Achieving high up-conversion efficiency requires not only high-quality inorganic nanoparticles, but also precise control of their surface functional groups. Gas-phase surface functionalization provides a new pathway towards controlling the surface of small inorganic nanoparticles. In this contribution, we utilize a one-step low-temperature plasma technique for the synthesis and in-flight partial functionalization of silicon QDs with alkyl chains. The partially functionalized surface is then modified further with 9-vinylanthracene via thermal hydrosilylation resulting in the grafting of 9-ethylanthracene (9EA) groups. We have found that the minimum alkyl ligand density necessary for quantum dot solubility also gives the maximum upconversion quantum yield, reaching 17% for silicon QDs with Si-dodecyl chains and an average of 3 9EA molecules per particle.

3.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 12263, 2021 06 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34112900

ABSTRACT

The COVID-19 crisis has taken a significant toll on human life and the global economy since its start in early 2020. Healthcare professionals have been particularly vulnerable because of the unprecedented shortage of Facepiece Respirators (FPRs), which act as fundamental tools to protect the medical staff treating the coronavirus patients. In addition, many FPRs are designed to be disposable single-use devices, creating an issue related to the generation of large quantities of non-biodegradable waste. In this contribution, we describe a plasma-based decontamination technique designed to circumvent the shortages of FPRs and alleviate the environmental problems posed by waste generation. The system utilizes a Dielectric Barrier Discharge (DBD) to generate ozone and feed it through the fibers of the FPRs. The flow-through configuration is different than canonical ozone-based sterilization methods, in which the equipment is placed in a sealed ozone-containing enclosure without any flow through the mask polymer fibers. We demonstrate the rapid decontamination of surgical masks using Escherichia coli (E. coli) and Vesicular Stomatitis Virus (VSV) as model pathogens, with the flow-through configuration providing a drastic reduction in sterilization time compared to the canonical approach. We also demonstrate that there is no deterioration in mask structure or filtration efficiency resulting from sterilization. Finally, we show that this decontamination approach can be implemented using readily available tools, such as a plastic box, a glass tube, few 3D printed components, and the high-voltage power supply from a plasma globe toy. The prototype assembled for this study is portable and affordable, with effectiveness comparable to that of larger and more expensive equipment.

4.
Chem Sci ; 12(19): 6737-6746, 2021 Apr 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34040750

ABSTRACT

Hybrid materials comprised of inorganic quantum dots functionalized with small-molecule organic chromophores have emerged as promising materials for reshaping light's energy content. Quantum dots in these structures can serve as light harvesting antennas that absorb photons and pass their energy to molecules bound to their surface in the form of spin-triplet excitons. Energy passed in this manner can fuel upconversion schemes that use triplet fusion to convert infrared light into visible emission. Likewise, triplet excitons passed in the opposite direction, from molecules to quantum dots, can enable solar cells that use singlet fission to circumvent the Shockley-Queisser limit. Silicon QDs represent a key target for these hybrid materials due to silicon's biocompatibility and preeminence within the solar energy market. However, while triplet transfer from silicon QDs to molecules has been observed, no reports to date have shown evidence of energy moving in the reverse direction. Here, we address this gap by creating silicon QDs functionalized with perylene chromophores that exhibit bidirectional triplet exciton transfer. Using transient absorption, we find triplet transfer from silicon to perylene takes place over 4.2 µs while energy transfer in the reverse direction occurs two orders of magnitude faster, on a 22 ns timescale. To demonstrate this system's utility, we use it to create a photon upconversion system that generates blue emission at 475 nm using photons with wavelengths as long as 730 nm. Our work shows formation of covalent linkages between silicon and organic molecules can provide sufficient electronic coupling to allow efficient bidirectional triplet exchange, enabling new technologies for photon conversion.

5.
ACS Appl Mater Interfaces ; 13(1): 458-467, 2021 Jan 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33373186

ABSTRACT

Biocidal nanothermite composites show great potential in combating biological warfare threats because of their high-energy-release rates and rapid biocidal agent release. Despite their high reactivity and combustion performance, these composites suffer from low-energy density because of the voids formed due to inefficient packing of fuel and oxidizer particles. In this study, we explore the potential of plasma-synthesized ultrafine Si nanoparticles (nSi, ∼5 nm) as an energetic filler fuel to increase the energy density of Al/Ca(IO3)2 energetic-biocidal composites by filling in the voids in the microstructure. Microscopic and elemental analyses show the partial filling of mesoparticle voids by nSi, resulting in an estimated energy density enhancement of ∼21%. In addition, constant-volume combustion cell results show that nSi addition leads to a ∼2-3-fold increase in reactivity and combustion performance, as compared to Al/Ca(IO3)2 mesoparticles. Oxidation timescale analyses suggest that nSi addition can promote initiation due to faster oxygen transport through the oxide shell of Si nanoparticles. At nSi loadings higher than ∼8%, however, slower burning characteristics of nSi and sintering effects lead to an overall degradation of combustion behavior of the composites.

6.
Faraday Discuss ; 222(0): 190-200, 2020 Jun 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32104858

ABSTRACT

The photophysics of silicon quantum dots (QDs) is not well understood despite their potential for many optoelectronic applications. One of the barriers to the study and widespread adoption of Si QDs is the difficulty in functionalizing their surface, to make, for example, a solution-processable electronically-active colloid. While thermal hydrosilylation of Si QDs is widely used, the high temperature typically needed may trigger undesirable side-effects, like uncontrolled polymerization of the terminal alkene. In this contribution, we show that this high-temperature method for installing aromatic and aliphatic ligands on non-thermal plasma-synthesized Si QDs can be replaced with a low-temperature, radical-initiated hydrosilylation method. Materials prepared via this low-temperature route perform similarly to those created via high-temperature thermal hydrosilylation when used in triplet fusion photon upconversion systems, suggesting the utility of low-temperature, radical-initiated methods for creating Si QDs with a range of functional behavior.

7.
Nanoscale Adv ; 2(10): 4368-4389, 2020 Oct 13.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36132933

ABSTRACT

Silicon has received a considerable amount of attention in the last few years because of its large lithiation capacity. Its widespread utilization in real-life lithium-ion batteries has so far been prevented by the plethora of challenges presented by this material. This review discusses the most promising technologies that have been put forward to address these issues. While silicon is now much closer to being compatible with commercial-grade storage devices, some critical barriers still deserve further attention. Most importantly, device performance is strongly dependent on particle size and size distribution, with these parameters strongly controlled by the particle synthesis technique. Moreover, the nanoparticle synthesis technique ultimately controls the material manufacturing cost and compatibility with large-scale utilization. These issues are discussed in detail, and recommendations to the community are provided.

8.
Nano Lett ; 19(10): 7236-7245, 2019 10 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31539476

ABSTRACT

Silicon-core-carbon-shell nanoparticles have been widely studied as promising candidates for the replacement of graphite in commercial lithium-ion batteries. Over more than 10 years of R&D, the many groups actively working in this field have proposed a profusion of distinctive nanomaterial designs. This broad variety makes it extremely challenging to establish mechanistic insight into how fundamental material structure and properties affect battery performance. In particular, the interplay between the character of the carbon encapsulation layer and the electrochemical performance of the composite is still poorly understood. In this work, we aim to address this lack of knowledge through the development of a modified chemical vapor deposition approach that enables precise control of the degree of graphitization of the carbon coating. We provide a comparison between core-shell structures maintaining identical silicon cores with different types of carbon shells, that is, graphitic carbon and amorphous carbon. A highly graphitic carbon layer is not only characterized by higher electrical conductivity but markedly favors the transport of lithium ions into the silicon core with respect to an amorphous one. This advantageous property confers better cycling stability to the composite material. We also demonstrate that the graphitic-carbon-coated particles display excellent electrochemical performance even when used as a simple "drop-in" additive in graphite-dominant anodes for current generation Li-ion batteries. Replacement of 10% by weight of graphite in the electrode composition results in an increase of 60% in the storage capacity with a first cycle Coulombic efficiency of 91% and capacity retention over 100 cycles of 86%.

9.
J Vis Exp ; (134)2018 04 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29683448

ABSTRACT

Electrostatic dust transport has been hypothesized to explain a number of observations of unusual planetary phenomena. Here, it is demonstrated using three recently developed experiments in which dust particles are exposed to thermal plasma with beam electrons, beam electrons only, or ultraviolet (UV) radiation only. The UV light source has a narrow bandwidth in wavelength centered at 172 nm. The beam electrons with the energy of 120 eV are created with a negatively biased hot filament. When the vacuum chamber is filled with the argon gas, a thermal plasma is created in addition to the electron beam. Insulating dust particles of a few tens of microns in diameter are used in the experiments. Dust particles are recorded to be lofted to a height up to a few centimeters with a launch speed up to 1 m/s. These experiments demonstrate that photo and/or secondary electron emission from a dusty surface changes the charging mechanism of dust particles. According to the recently developed "patched charge model", the emitted electrons can be re-absorbed inside microcavities between neighboring dust particles below the surface, causing the accumulation of enhanced negative charges on the surrounding dust particles. The repulsive forces between these negatively charged particles may be large enough to mobilize and lift them off the surface. These experiments present the advanced understanding of dust charging and transport on dusty surfaces, and laid a foundation for future investigations of its role in the surface evolution of airless planetary bodies.


Subject(s)
Dust , Plasma Gases , Ultraviolet Rays
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