Title:
Gluing Molecules to Surfaces: Nanocoatings for Improved Durability of Molecularly Enabled Devices

No Thumbnail Available
Author(s)
Losego, Mark D.
Authors
Advisor(s)
Advisor(s)
Editor(s)
Associated Organization(s)
Series
Collections
Supplementary to
Abstract
Molecularly sensitized devices that rely on surface bound molecules to impart functionality are keenly susceptible to device degradation via hydrolysis of anchor group chemistries and subsequent molecule detachment. Recent commercialization success in dye-sensitized solar cells is largely possible due to brute-force encapsulation engineering. However, using molecular sensitizers in aqueous environments as water oxidation catalysts or biological sensors poses an even greater challenge. This talk will highlight new advances in the use of low temperature atomic layer deposition (ALD) applied after surface functionalization to drastically improve molecular attachment in aqueous environs. We have shown that ultrathin (< 1 nm) ALD coatings of inorganic oxides ON TOP of the molecular sensitizers improve attachment by orders of magnitude. These “coated” molecules still function as light absorbers, electron transfer agents, and catalytic species. The current state-of-the-science will be discussed including what has been learned about the changes in chemical structure upon ALD processing via in-situ FTIR spectroscopy studies and what current challenges remain in fully understanding how ALD encapsulation affects electron transfer at the molecule-substrate interface.
Sponsor
Date Issued
2016-08-30
Extent
48:49 minutes
Resource Type
Moving Image
Resource Subtype
Lecture
Rights Statement
Rights URI