TY - JOUR
T1 - Functionalization of Electrode Surfaces with Reactive Supramolecular Oligomers Enables the Control of Monolayer Properties to Restore Electrochemical Reversibility
AU - Tsironi, Ifigeneia
AU - Maleszka, Jarek A.
AU - Wilson-Kovacs, Robert S.
AU - Paulino, Victor A.
AU - Acevedo, Orlando
AU - Mukhopadhyay, Arindam
AU - Olivier, Jean Hubert
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank Dr. Carrie Donley at UNC Chapel Hill for performing XPS experiments on the functionalized surface. They are grateful to BioNIUM for providing access to the atomic force microscope. They also thank Dr. Ziming Zhang in the Department of Chemistry at the University of Miami for providing guidance on the 2D NMR experiments. The authors are grateful to the Institute for Data Science and Computing at the University of Miami for providing access to Pegasus supercomputer. The research conducted on the synthesis and aggregation properties of π-conjugated dyes is supported by the National Science Foundation through the NSF CAREER award CHE-1941410. Efforts related to the functionalization of silicon electrodes are sponsored by the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation through the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Young Investigator Award 2018.
Funding Information:
The research conducted on the synthesis and aggregation properties of π-conjugated dyes is supported by the National Science Foundation through the NSF CAREER award CHE-1941410. Efforts related to the functionalization of silicon electrodes are sponsored by the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Foundation through the Arnold and Mabel Beckman Young Investigator Award 2018.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 American Chemical Society.
PY - 2023/8/15
Y1 - 2023/8/15
N2 - The functionalization of conducting silicon (Si) substrates with redox-active probes delivers hybrid semiconducting interfaces whose electronic functions are parameterized by the molecular conformations of monolayers. However, it remains challenging to build electronically homogeneous semiconducting interfaces using flat, π-conjugated derivatives that are prone to aggregation, as structural heterogeneity in the solid state unequivocally engenders ill-defined electronic domains. This limitation has notoriously hampered the development of n-type semiconducting Si interfaces derived from rylene dyes, which possess enticing applications in solar energy capture and conversion. Herein, this challenge is overcome by using supramolecular oligomers derived from reactive naphthalene diimide (NDI) units as structural templates to control the electrochemical response of semiconducting monolayers at Si interfaces. Specifically, conducting Si surfaces functionalized with NDI noncovalent assemblies exhibit reversible electrochemical signals and reduction potentials stabilized by more than 100 mV compared to semiconducting interfaces derived from molecularly derived precursors. Leveraging density functional theory and molecular dynamics simulations, the potentiometric properties recorded experimentally are assigned to discrete NDI conformations, which are parameterized by the aggregation state of the precursors in solution. These findings delineate a novel strategy to control the electronic structure homogeneity of semiconducting interfaces constructed from dyes infamously known to form ill-defined electronic domains.
AB - The functionalization of conducting silicon (Si) substrates with redox-active probes delivers hybrid semiconducting interfaces whose electronic functions are parameterized by the molecular conformations of monolayers. However, it remains challenging to build electronically homogeneous semiconducting interfaces using flat, π-conjugated derivatives that are prone to aggregation, as structural heterogeneity in the solid state unequivocally engenders ill-defined electronic domains. This limitation has notoriously hampered the development of n-type semiconducting Si interfaces derived from rylene dyes, which possess enticing applications in solar energy capture and conversion. Herein, this challenge is overcome by using supramolecular oligomers derived from reactive naphthalene diimide (NDI) units as structural templates to control the electrochemical response of semiconducting monolayers at Si interfaces. Specifically, conducting Si surfaces functionalized with NDI noncovalent assemblies exhibit reversible electrochemical signals and reduction potentials stabilized by more than 100 mV compared to semiconducting interfaces derived from molecularly derived precursors. Leveraging density functional theory and molecular dynamics simulations, the potentiometric properties recorded experimentally are assigned to discrete NDI conformations, which are parameterized by the aggregation state of the precursors in solution. These findings delineate a novel strategy to control the electronic structure homogeneity of semiconducting interfaces constructed from dyes infamously known to form ill-defined electronic domains.
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85169314077
UR - https://www.mendeley.com/catalogue/6d47b524-3a4b-3349-b092-16b84b3e1920/
U2 - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.3c01168
DO - 10.1021/acs.chemmater.3c01168
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85169314077
SN - 0897-4756
VL - 35
SP - 6877
EP - 6888
JO - Chemistry of Materials
JF - Chemistry of Materials
IS - 17
ER -