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Molecular-Doped Protein-Based Elastomers as a Versatile Platform for Energy-Transfer Studies and Emissive Down-Converting Polymers for Light-Emitting Applications.

Ramesh NandiAnna OrieshynaNadav Amdursky
Published in: ACS applied materials & interfaces (2023)
Much effort is being employed for designing "green" environmental emissive materials that are capable of color-tuning, i.e., down-converting the emission, and white-light generation (WLG). Here, we introduce a protein-based elastomer that can noncovalently bind a variety of chromophores while preventing their aggregation. Such binding capabilities are unique to the albumin-based materials that we use here in a process we refer to as "molecular doping". In the first part of this study, we explore the energy transfer across five different chromophores within the protein matrix, where the closely packed chromophore organization enables high energy-transfer efficiencies among them. In the second part, we show the easy control of blue, green, and red chromophores within the biopolymer, resulting in tunable emission properties of the film and WLG. The highly affordable chosen protein and the straightforward molecular doping strategy make our protein elastomers an attractive choice for an emissive material, as either a scaffold for investigating energy transfer in proteins or possible integration in light-emitting applications.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • light emitting
  • quantum dots
  • protein protein
  • binding protein
  • amino acid
  • small molecule
  • risk assessment
  • transcription factor
  • highly efficient