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Stabilization of Ruthenium(II) Polypyridyl Chromophores on Mesoporous TiO2 Electrodes: Surface Reductive Electropolymerization and Silane Chemistry
Author(s) -
Wu Lei,
M. Kyle Brennaman,
Animesh Nayak,
Michael S. Eberhart,
Alexander J. M. Miller,
Thomas J. Meyer
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
acs central science
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.893
H-Index - 76
eISSN - 2374-7951
pISSN - 2374-7943
DOI - 10.1021/acscentsci.8b00914
Subject(s) - chromophore , silane , ruthenium , surface modification , electron transfer , materials science , electrode , mesoporous material , photochemistry , polymer , chemical engineering , chemistry , inorganic chemistry , catalysis , organic chemistry , engineering
Stabilization is a critical issue in the long term operation of dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cells (DSPECs) for water splitting or CO 2 reduction. The cells require a stable binding of the robust molecular chromophores, catalysts, and chromophore/catalyst assemblies on metal oxide semiconductor electrodes under the corresponding (photoelectro)chemical conditions. Here, an efficient stabilization strategy is presented based on functionalization of FTO |nano TiO 2 (mesoporous, nanostructured TiO 2 deposited on fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO) glass) electrodes with a vinylsilane followed by surface reductive electropolymerization of a vinyl-derivatized Ru(II) polypyridyl chromophore. The surface electropolymerization was dominated by a grafting-through mechanism, and rapidly completed within minutes. Chromophore surface coverages were controlled up to three equivalent monolayers by the number of electropolymerization cycles. The silane immobilization and cross-linked polymer network produced highly (photo)stabilized chromophore-grafted FTO |nano TiO 2 electrodes. The electrodes showed significant improvements over structures based on atomic layer deposition and polymer dip-coating stabilization methods in a wide pH range from pH ≈ 1 to pH ≈ 12.5 under both dark and light conditions. Under illumination, with hydroquinone added as a sacrificial electron transfer donor, a photoresponse for sustained electron transfer mediation occurred for at least ∼20 h in a pH ≈ 7.5 phosphate buffer (0.1 M NaH 2 PO 4 /Na 2 HPO 4 , with 0.5 M NaClO 4 ). The overall procedure provides an efficient way to fabricate highly stabilized molecular assemblies on electrode surfaces with potential applications for DSPECs in solar fuels.

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