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A Dual Threat: Redox-Activity and Electronic Structures of Well-Defined Donor-Acceptor Fulleretic Covalent-Organic Materials.

Gabrielle A LeithAllison M RiceBrandon J YarbroughAnna A BersenevaRichard T LyCharles N BuckDenis ChusovAmy J BrandtDonna A ChenBenjamin W LammMorgan StefikKenneth S StephensonMark D SmithAaron A VannucciPerry J PellechiaSophya V GarashchukNatalia B Shustova
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2020)
The effect of donor (D)-acceptor (A) alignment on the materials electronic structure was probed for the first time using novel purely organic porous crystalline materials with covalently bound two- and three-dimensional acceptors. The first studies towards estimation of charge transfer rates as a function of acceptor stacking are in line with the experimentally observed drastic, eight-fold conductivity enhancement. The first evaluation of redox behavior of buckyball- or tetracyanoquinodimethane-integrated crystalline was conducted. In parallel with tailoring the D-A alignment responsible for "static" changes in materials properties, an external stimulus was applied for "dynamic" control of the electronic profiles. Overall, the presented D-A strategic design, with stimuli-controlled electronic behavior, redox activity, and modularity could be used as a blueprint for the development of electroactive and conductive multidimensional and multifunctional crystalline porous materials.
Keyphrases
  • solar cells
  • room temperature
  • drug delivery
  • metal organic framework
  • energy transfer
  • high resolution
  • cancer therapy
  • water soluble
  • highly efficient
  • electron transfer
  • quantum dots