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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Structure-dependent charge transfer at the interafce between organic thin films, and metals and metal oxides

Ahmadi, Sareh January 2013 (has links)
The purpose of the research work, presented in this thesis is to offer a detailed atomic level study of interfaces created by adsorption of organic molecules on metals and metal oxides to point out significant impact of substrate, dye structure as well as different mediators on the charge transfer at these interfaces, which is proven to influence the device performance to a great extent. Adsorption of organic photosensitive molecules on metals and metal-oxides is the main focus of this thesis. Phthalocyanines which are organic semiconductors offer a broad range of properties, such as thermal and chemical stability, high charge mobility and strong absorption coefficient in the visible and near-IR regions, which make them very attractive to be applied in various systems and devices. Fuel cells, organic field-effect transistors (OFETs), organic light emitting diodes (OLEDs) and solar cells are examples of phthalocyanine’s applications. The main focus of this work is to characterize the interfaces of Dye Sensitized Solar Cells (DSSCs). DSSC was invented by Michael Grätzel and Brian O’Regan in 1988. At the heart of this cell there is an oxide which is coated by a photosensitive dye. Under illumination, an electron is excited from HOMO to LUMO of the molecule, which can be further transferred to the conduction band of the oxide by a proper energy level alignment. The original state of the dye is regenerated by electron donation via the electrolyte, which usually is an organic solvent containing a redox couple e.g., iodide/triiodide. The iodide is regenerated by reduction of triiodide at the counter electrode. To improve the functionality of the cell, different additives can be added to the electrolyte. To mimic the interfaces of this cell, molecular layers of MPc (M: Fe, Zn, Mg) are adsorbed on both metallic surfaces, Au(111) and Pt(111), and rutile TiO2(110). Layers of iodine were inserted between metallic substrates and dyes to investigate the electronic properties and charge transfer at these multi-interface systems. 4-tert-butyl pyridine is a significant additive to the electrolyte and has proven to enhance the cell’s performance. This molecule was also adsorbed on Pt(111) and TiO2(110). Phthalocyanines were deposited by organic molecular beam deposition and 4TBP was evaporated at room temperature. Surface structures and reconstructions were confirmed by LEED measurements. Surface sensitive synchrotron radiation based spectroscopy methods, XPS and NEXAFS were applied to characterize these surfaces and interfaces. STM images directly give a topographical and electronic map over the surface. All measurements were carried out in UHV condition. When MPc was adsorbed on Au(111) and TiO2(110), charge transfer from molecule to substrate is suggested, while the opposite holds for MPc adsorbed on Pt(111). Moreover, stronger interaction between MPc and Pt(111) and TiO2(110) compared to Au(111) also demonstrates the effect of substrate on the charge transfer at the interface. The stronger interaction observed for these two substrates disturbed the smooth growth of a monolayer; it also resulted in bending of the molecular plane. Interaction of MPc with metallic surfaces was modified by inserting iodine at the interface. Another substrate-related effect was observed when MgPc was adsorbed on TiO2(110);  and -cross linked surfaces, where the surface reconstruction directly affect the molecular configuration as well as electronic structure at the interface. Besides, it is shown that the d-orbital filling of the central metal atom in MPc plays an important role for the properties of the molecular layer as well as charge transfer at the interface. Upon adsorption of 4TBP on Pt(111), C-H bond is dissociatively broken and molecules is adsorbed with N atoms down. Modification of surface by iodine, prevent this dissociation. In the low coverage of iodine, there is a competition between 4TBP and iodine to directly bind to Pt(111). Investigation on the adsorption of 4TBP on TiO2(110) illustrated that these molecules in low coverage regime, prefer the oxygen vacancy sites and their adsorption on these sites, results in a downward band bending at the substrate’s surface. / <p>QC 20131203</p>
2

Molecular Interaction of Thin Film Photosensitive Organic Dyes on TiO2 Surfaces

Yu, Shun January 2011 (has links)
The photosensitive molecule adsorption on titanium dioxide (TiO2) forms the so-called “dye sensitized TiO2” system, a typical organic/oxide heterojunction, which is of great interest in catalysis and energy applications, e.g. dye-sensitized solar cell (DSSC). Traditionally, the transition metal complex dyes are the focus of the study. However, as the fast development of the organic semiconductors and invention of new pure organic dyes, it is necessary to expand the research horizon to cover these molecules and concrete the fundamental understanding of their basic properties, especially during sensitization.In this work, we focus on two different photosensitive molecules: phthalocyanines and triphenylamine-based dyes. Phthalocyanines are organic semiconductors with symmetric macro aromatic molecular structures. They possess good photoelectrical properties and good thermal and chemical stability, which make them widely used in the organic electronic industries. Triphenylamine-based dyes are new types of pure organic dyes which deliver high efficiency and reduce the cost of DSSC. They can be nominated as one of the strong candidates to substitute the ruthenium complex dyes in DSSC. The researches were carried out using classic surface science techniques on single crystal substrates and under ultrahigh vacuum condition. The photosensitive molecules were deposited by organic molecular beam deposition. The substrate reconstruction and ordering were checked by low energy electron diffraction. The molecular electronic, geometric structures and charge transfer properties were characterized by photoelectron spectroscopy, near edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy and resonant photoelectron spectroscopy (RPES). Scanning tunneling microscopy is used to directly image the molecular adsorption.For phthalocyanines, we select MgPc, ZnPc, FePc and TiOPc, which showed a general charge transfer from molecule to the substrate when adsorbed on rutile TiO2(110) surface with 1×1 and 1×2 reconstructions. This charge transfer can be prevented by modifying the TiO2 surface with pyridine derivatives (4-tert-butyl pyridine (4TBP), 2,2’-bipyridine and 4,4’-bipyridine), and furthermore the energy level alignment at the interface is modified by the surface dipole established by the pyridine molecules. Annealing also plays an important role to control the molecular structure and change the electronic structure together with the charge transfer properties, shown by TiOPc film. Special discussions were done for 4TBP for its ability to shift the substrate band bending by healing the oxygen vacancies, which makes it an important additive in the DSSC electrolyte. For the triphenylamine-based dye (TPAC), the systematic deposition enables the characterization of the coverage dependent changes of molecular electronic and geometric structures. The light polarization dependent charge transfer was revealed by RPES. Furthermore, the iodine doped TPAC on TiO2 were investigated to mimic the electrolyte/dye/TiO2 interface in the real DSSC.The whole work of this thesis aims to provide fundamental understanding of the interaction between photosensitive molecules on TiO2 surfaces at molecular level in the monolayer region, e.g. the formation of interfacial states and the coverage dependent atomic and electronic structures, etc. We explored the potential of the application of new dyes and modified of the existing system by identifying their advantage and disadvantage. The results may benefit the fields of dye syntheses, catalysis researches and designs of organic photovoltaic devices. / QC 20111114
3

Near-IR Dye Sensitization of Polymer Solar Cells / 高分子太陽電池の近赤外色素増感

Xu, Huajun 24 March 2014 (has links)
京都大学 / 0048 / 新制・課程博士 / 博士(工学) / 甲第18291号 / 工博第3883号 / 新制||工||1596(附属図書館) / 31149 / 京都大学大学院工学研究科高分子化学専攻 / (主査)教授 伊藤 紳三郎, 教授 木村 俊作, 教授 辻井 敬亘 / 学位規則第4条第1項該当 / Doctor of Philosophy (Engineering) / Kyoto University / DGAM
4

Dye sensitzation effects on lanthanide upconversion nanoparticles

Bäck, Dag Albin, Jörgensen, Andreas January 2022 (has links)
In this report we studied the properties of the dye IR806 and possible mechanisms of the dye sensitization effect on ytterbium-erbium co-doped upconversion nanoparticles. We found that the dye IR806 has two primary emission peaks in the NIR spectral range at around 850 nm and at around 950 nm. The intensity of these peaks were observed to be affected by the concentration of the dye and the addition of Gadolinium(III) chloride and Yttrium(III) chloride. Specifically increases in the intensity of the 950 nm peak relative to the 850 nm were of interest since ytterbium readily absorbs 950 nm and transfers this energy in the upconversion process. Our hypothesis is that the change in the intensity of the 850 nm and the 950 nm peak is associated with aggregation of the dye IR806 and the amount of monomers and dimers. Results from adding ytterbium-erbium co-doped upconversion nanoparticles in IR806-ethanol solution points to the picture of dimers being formed on the surface on the nanoparticles. This analysis is however based on the assumption that the 850 nm emission peak of IR806 is associated with monomers and that the 950 peak is associated with dimers, which is yet to be confirmed and further studies are therefore needed.
5

Dye Sensitization in a Photoelectrochemical Water-Splitting Cell Using N,N'-Bis(3-phosphonopropyl)-3,4,9,10-perylenedicarboximide

Emig, Andrew James 20 September 2012 (has links)
No description available.
6

Charge Carrier Dynamics of Bare and Dye-Sensitized Cerium Oxide Nanoparticles

Empey, Jennifer January 2021 (has links)
No description available.
7

Design and Optimization of TiO2 Nanomaterial-based Photoelectrochemical Biosensors / Photoelectrochemical Biosensing

Sakib, Sadman January 2023 (has links)
Recently, there has been a shift in the global healthcare paradigm, which is prioritizing a more patient-centric approach causing an increase in the demand for rapid and point-of-care (PoC) biomolecular detection. Electrochemical (EC) signal transduction has been used to great effect to meet some of this demand by constructing biosensors with high sensitivity and low limit-of-detection (LOD). However, signal generation in EC biosensors requires input bias potentials to activate electrochemical redox reactions. This means EC systems are inherently built-in with high background noise that limits the performance of biosensors. Biosensors with photoelectrochemical (PEC) signal transduction have recently shown great promise in being able to deliver biomolecular detection on par with, if not better than, EC biosensors. PEC biosensing directly improves upon EC signal transduction by combining EC signal readout with optical excitation as the bias input, and generally being able to achieve similar performance with simpler bioassay designs. In this scheme, the input and output of the signal transduction are decoupled from each other, significantly reducing background signal in biosensors to enhance their sensitivity. Despite being highly effective, PEC biosensors have yet to find commercial breakthrough as they have so far only shown quantitative analysis on a limited set of biomarkers and have not shown to be PoC-capable. In this thesis, we developed new strategies to improve PEC signal transduction so that it could be applied to build robust ultrasensitive PoC biosensors with high dynamic range, simple operation, and low LOD for detecting a wide variety of different disease biomarkers. The most popular photoactive materials used in the fabrication of PEC biosensors are TiO2 nanomaterials on account of their availability, chemical stability, high catalytic efficiency, tunable morphology, and ideal band energy levels for driving useful EC reactions. However, unmodified TiO2 suffers from several drawbacks that limit its photocurrent generation efficiency, such as poor visible range absorbance due its wide bandgap and fast charge carrier recombination. Alongside the additional difficulty of biofunctionalization, PEC biosensors fabricated from TiO2 nanomaterials are limited in their bioanalytic performance. In order to make improvements on PEC biosensors, we modified the surface of TiO2 nanomaterials by chelating them with catecholate molecules. The surface modification with catecholates formed charge transfer complexes on TiO2, which resulted in enhanced photoexcitation due to enhanced electron injection attributable to intermolecular orbital excitations in the catecholate molecules. The catecholate ligands also added improved colloidal stability and additional functional groups that aided with biofunctionalization. This resulted in multifunctional TiO2 nanoparticles with improved photocurrent signal generation and enhanced visible range photoabsorption. We took this one step further by taking advantage of the high binding affinity of catecholates on TiO2 surfaces to create novel synthesis methods that created high surface area nanostructures. Photoelectrodes fabricated from these new TiO2 nanostructures had nanoporous morphology and were able to capture biomolecules more efficiently. Using our novel TiO2 nanomaterials, we fabricated signal-off biosensors that were able to detect DNA biomarkers and IL-6 protein (cancer and inflammatory biomarker) in urine with an LOD of 1.38 pM and 3.6 pg mL-1, respectively. We further explored hybrid semiconductor structures by combining TiO2 nanomaterials with other materials such semiconductors with different bandgaps or plasmonic metal nanoparticles (NP). Using the aforementioned catechol-assisted synthesis techniques, we were able to produce different morphologies of TiO2 nanomaterials with distinct phases: anatase TiO2 nanorod assemblies and rutile TiO2 NP. The two different TiO2 nanomaterials have different bandgaps and can be used to form semiconductor heterostructures. By combining rutile TiO2 NPs with DNAzymes, a type of synthetic functional nucleic acid, we created a photoactive molecular switch that worked by making and breaking heterostructures between the two TiO2 nanomaterials. We used DNAzymes specific to E. coli bacteria to develop a highly sensitive signal-on bacterial detection platform that was able to detect E. coli in lake water samples with an LOD of 18 CFU mL-1. Using catecholate-assisted photoreduction synthesis, we developed an efficient and novel method for decorating TiO2 NP with silver (Ag) NP. The resultant nanomaterial featured TiO2 NP surfaces modified with Hematoxylin (HTX) dyes and covered with sub-nanometer sized silver NP. The band structure of TiO2/HTX/Ag NP hybrid material involved high energy electron generation through decay of surface plasmons in the Ag NP and then enhancing the photoelectron injection process between HTX and TiO2. This significantly enhances the photoexcitation and photoabsorbtion, resulting in the material with the highest photocurrent generation as presented in this thesis. By taking advantage of thiol-metal bonds, we used the TiO2/HTX/Ag NP material system in the fabrication of a highly sensitive signal-off microRNA (prostate cancer biomarker) sensor with an LOD of 172 fM in urine. Special attention was paid to the design of PEC bioassays in this work so that they are miniaturized and easy to use, and thus suitable for PoC applications. Because PEC signal transduction generates ultrahigh signals compared to other transduction methods, it allows bioassay designs to remain simple without sacrificing performance. This allowed us to create bioassays with very few operational steps, that excel in reliability and ease-of-use. To further improve PoC capability, we explored multiplexing with the biosensor made from TiO2/HTX/Ag NP. Here we were able to demonstrate multiplexing with PEC signal transduction for the first time. Another major barrier to PEC biosensors becoming widespread is the requirement of large benchtop instrumentation such as potentiostats and light sources. To address this challenge, we designed a portable smartphone-interfacing potentiostat with a built-in LED light source to support PEC biosensing. This device, named the PECsense was as versatile as any commercial potentiostats, having features such as adjustable recording periods, variable illumination periods, automatic data processing and being able to record both anodic and cathodic photocurrents. The PECsense was demonstrated to be used successfully as a signal reader in a PEC DNA detection assay. Ultimately, we designed several ultrasensitive PEC biosensors used for the detection of four different diagnostic biomarkers. Combined with the exploration of miniaturized design, multiplexing and portable signal-reading, our designed PEC biosensors were made PoC-capable. The work in this thesis presented innovations in areas of nanotechnology, material synthesis, solid-state physics, biotechnology and embedded systems for the advancement of biomolecular detection and PoC diagnostics. / Thesis / Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) / Biosensors show great promise for use in point-of-care diagnostics and health monitoring systems. Such deceives combine biorecongition with signal transduction for analyzing biologically relevant targets. Photoelectrochemical (PEC) mode of signal reading, particularly those based on TiO2 nanomaterials, have shown great promise in delivering point-of-care biosensors that have excellent diagnostic performance. In this thesis, our goal was to develope new techniques for creating low-cost, easy-to-use and ultrasensitive photoelectrochemical biosensors. To achieve this goal, our work here can broadly be split into three objectives. Firstly, we focused on developing new material synthesis methods to improve traditional TiO2 nanomaterials so they can be more useful in PEC biosensors. These methods involved combining TiO2 with organic molecules known as catecholates and metal nanoparticles. This work created material systems that are able to generate high signals and more easily interface with biomolecules for improving PEC biosensor sensitivity. For the second objective, we used our newly developed enhanced TiO2 nanomaterials as the foundation for designing various bioassays for the detection of a wide range of different biological targets such as DNA, RNA, proteins and bacteria. This served to demonstrate the robustness of PEC signal reading as a tool for various markers of diseases. Despite PEC biosensors being a powerful tool in healthcare, they have seen very little commercial breakthrough, which can primarily be attributed to needing bulky benchtop instruments and light sources for signal reading. For the last objective, we worked on designing a handheld smartphone-operated signal-reader for PEC biosensing with its own built-in light source.

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