A tetra-arylporphyrin dye was functionalized with three different anchoring groups used to attach molecules to metal oxide surfaces. The physical, photophysical and electrochemical properties of the derivatized porphyrins were studied, and the dyes were then linked to mesoporous TiO2. The anchoring groups were β-vinyl groups bearing either a carboxylate, a phosphonate or a siloxy moiety. The siloxy linkages were made by treatment of the metal oxide with a silatrane derivative of the porphyrin. The surface binding and lability of the anchored molecules were studied, and dye performance was compared in a dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC). Transient absorption spectroscopy was used to study charge recombination processes. At comparable surface concentration, the porphyrin showed comparable performance in the DSSC, regardless of the linker. However, the total surface coverage achievable with the carboxylate was about twice that obtainable with the other two linkers, and this led to higher current densities for the carboxylate DSSC. On the other hand, the carboxylate-linked dyes were readily leached from the metal oxide surface under alkaline conditions. The phosphonates were considerably less labile, and the siloxy-linked porphyrins were most resistant to leaching from the surface. The use of silatrane proved to be a practical and convenient way to introduce the siloxy linkages, which can confer greatly increased stability on dye-sensitized electrodes with photoelectrochemical performance comparable to that of the other linkers.
Silicon nanoparticles with strong blue photoluminescence were synthesized by electrochemical etching of silicon wafers and ultrasonically removed under N2 atmosphere in organic solvents to produce colloids. Thermal treatment leads to the formation of colloidal Si particles of 3 ± 1 nm diameter, which upon excitation with 340 – 380 nm light exhibited room temperature luminescence in the range from 400 to 500 nm. The emission and the one- and two-photon excitation spectra of the particles are not sensitive to surface functionalization with methyl 2-methylprop-2-enoate. However, the derivatized particles show higher emission quantum yields in air-saturated suspensions (44%) than the underivatized particles (27%), as well as higher stability of its dispersions. FTIR and XPS spectra indicate a significant surface oxidation of the particles. The Si:O:C ratio at the surface of the derivatized particles estimated from XPS is Si3O6(C5O2Hy)1, with y = 7 - 8. Vibronic spacing is observed in both the emission and excitation spectra. The information obtained from one-photon excitation experiments (emission and excitation spectra, photoluminescence quantum yields, luminescence decay lifetimes and anisotropy correlation lifetimes), as well as from two-photon excitation fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (brightness and diffusion coefficients) and TEM indicate that the blue-emitting particles are monodisperse and ball-shaped. Particle size clearly determines the emission and excitation spectral region, as expected from quantum confinement, but the presence and extent of Si-O species on the silicon networks seem crucial for determining the spectrum features and intensity of emission. The nanoparticles could hold great potential as quantum dots for applications as luminescence sensors in biology and environmental science.
The effect of molecular oxygen and water on the blue photoluminescence of silicon nanoparticles synthesized by anodic oxidation of silicon wafers and surface functionalized with 2-methyl 2-propenoic acid methyl ester is investigated. The particles of 3 +/- 1 nm diameter and a surface composition of Si(3)O(6)(C(5)O(2)H(8)) exhibit room-temperature luminescence in the wavelength range 300-600 nm upon excitation with 300-400 nm light. The luminescence shows vibronic resolution and high quantum yields in toluene suspensions, while a vibronically unresolved spectrum and lower emission quantum yields are observed in aqueous suspensions. The luminescence intensity, though not the spectrum features, depends on the presence of dissolved O(2). Strikingly, the luminescence decay time on the order of 1 ns does not depend on the solvent or on the presence of O(2). To determine the mechanisms involved in these processes, time-resolved and steady-state experiments are performed. These include low-temperature luminescence, heavy atom effect, singlet molecular oxygen ((1)O(2)) phosphorescence detection, reaction of specific probes with (1)O(2), and determination of O(2) and N(2) adsorption isotherms at 77 K. The results obtained indicate that physisorbed O(2) is capable of quenching nondiffusively the particle luminescence at room temperature. The most probable mechanism for (1)O(2) generation involves the energy transfer from an exciton singlet state to O(2) to yield an exciton triplet of low energy (<0.98 eV) and (1)O(2). In aqueous solutions, excited silicon nanoparticles are able to reduce methylviologen on its surface.
Silicon nanoparticles of 1–5 nm size (SiNPs) were synthesized by a bottom-up (BU) approach involving a chemical wet method. The contribution of different emitters to the overall excitation–emission matrix was analyzed on the assumption that pure substances existing in a unique form show an excitation wavelength-invariant emission spectrum. The occurrence of emitters differing in size and aggregation was supported by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), small-angle X-ray scattering (SAXS), time-resolved single photon counting, and time-resolved anisotropy experiments. The effect on photoluminescence (PL) of the particle surface oxidation as a result of aging is studied and compared to that of surface oxidized particles obtained by a top-down (TD) approach following an electrochemical method with HF etching. Surface oxidation to SiO x seems to introduce two different effects on the SiNP PL. An emission originated in surface states associated to SiO x was identified and observed for SiNPs synthesized by both BU and TD approaches. Blue-shifted excitation–emission spectra associated to a silicon core in embedded SiO x nanostructures were also identified. Theoretical studies were carried out to help understand the observed results.
We report on the photosensitization of titanium dioxide nanoparticles (TiO2 NPs) synthesized inside AOT (bis(2-ethylhexyl) sulfosuccinate sodium salt) reverse micelles following photoexcitation of perylene derivatives with dicarboxylate anchoring groups. The dyes, 1,7-dibromoperylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxy dianhydride (1), 1,7-dipyrrolidinylperylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxy dianhydride (2), and 1,7-bis(4-tert-butylphenyloxy)perylene-3,4,9,10-tetracarboxy dianhydride (3), have considerably different driving forces for photoinduced electron injection into the TiO2 conduction band, as estimated by electrochemical measurements and quantum mechanical calculations. Fluorescence anisotropy measurements indicate that dyes 1 and 2 are preferentially solubilized in the micellar structure, creating a relatively large local concentration that favors the attachment of the dye to the TiO2 surface. The binding process was followed by monitoring the hypsochromic shift of the dye absorption spectra over time for 1 and 2. Photoinduced electron transfer from the singlet excited state of 1 and 2 to the TiO2 conduction band (CB) is indicated by emission quenching of the TiO2-bound form of the dyes and confirmed by transient absorption measurements of the radical cation of the dyes and free carriers (injected electrons) in the TiO2 semiconductor. Steady state and transient spectroscopy indicate that dye 3 does not bind to the TiO2 NPs and does not photosensitize the semiconductor. This observation was rationalized as a consequence of the bulky t-butylphenyloxy groups which create a strong steric impediment for deep access of the dye within the micelle structure to reach the semiconductor oxide surface.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
hi@scite.ai
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.