Publications by authors named "Cara Gannett"

Article Synopsis
  • Singlet fission is a process that can enhance the efficiency of solar cells, and Indolonaphthyridine thiophene (INDT) is a promising material for this purpose.
  • The study explores how different chemical linkages (para-phenyl, meta-phenyl, and fluorene) affect the rate of singlet fission in INDT dimers, finding that the para-phenyl linkage yields the fastest rate due to better electronic coupling.
  • Additionally, the research indicates that the surrounding environment (like using o-dichlorobenzene over toluene) influences singlet fission rates and supports a more complex understanding of how polarisable materials like INDT function.
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Strategies for the sustainable synthesis of redox-active organic polymers could lead to next-generation organic electrode materials for electrochemical energy storage, electrocatalysis, and electro-swing chemical separations. Among redox-active moieties, benzils or aromatic 1,2-diones are particularly attractive due to their high theoretical gravimetric capacities and fast charge/discharge rates. Herein, we demonstrate that the cyanide-catalyzed polymerization of simple dialdehyde monomers unexpectedly leads to insoluble redox-active benzil-linked polymers instead of the expected benzoin polymers, as supported by solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and electrochemical characterization.

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Hydrogen-atom transfer mediated by earth-abundant transition-metal hydrides (M-Hs) has emerged as a powerful tool in organic synthesis. Current methods to generate M-Hs most frequently rely on oxidatively initiated hydride transfer. Herein, we report a reductive approach to generate Co-H, which allows for canonical hydrogen evolution reactions to be intercepted by hydrogen-atom transfer to an alkene.

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Organic electrode materials offer unique opportunities to utilize ion-electrode interactions to develop diverse, versatile, and high-performing secondary batteries, particularly for applications requiring high power densities. However, a lack of well-defined structure-property relationships for redox-active organic materials restricts the advancement of the field. Herein, we investigate a family of diimide-based polymer materials with several charge-compensating ions (Li, Na, K) in order to systematically probe how redox-active moiety, ion, and polymer flexibility dictate their thermodynamic and kinetic properties.

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The study and application of transition metal hydrides (TMHs) has been an active area of chemical research since the early 1960s, for energy storage, through the reduction of protons to generate hydrogen, and for organic synthesis, for the functionalization of unsaturated C-C, C-O and C-N bonds. In the former instance, electrochemical means for driving such reactivity has been common place since the 1950s but the use of stoichiometric exogenous organic- and metal-based reductants to harness the power of TMHs in synthetic chemistry remains the norm. In particular, cobalt-based TMHs have found widespread use for the derivatization of olefins and alkynes in complex molecule construction, often by a net hydrogen atom transfer (HAT).

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The synthesis of terpenes is a large field of research that is woven deeply into the history of chemistry. Terpene biosynthesis is a case study of how the logic of a modular design can lead to diverse structures with unparalleled efficiency. This work leverages modern nickel-catalyzed electrochemical sp-sp decarboxylative coupling reactions, enabled by silver nanoparticle-modified electrodes, to intuitively assemble terpene natural products and complex polyenes by using simple modular building blocks.

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The evaluation of new materials, interfaces, and architectures for battery applications are routinely conducted in two-electrode coin cell experiments, which although convenient, can lead to misrepresentations of the processes occurring in the cell. Few three-electrode coin cell designs have been reported, but those which have involve complex cell assembly, specialized equipment, and/or cell configurations which vary drastically from the standard coin cell environment. Herein, we present a novel, facile three-electrode coin cell design which can be easily assembled with existing coin cell parts and which accurately reproduces the environment of traditional coin cells.

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Understanding the properties that govern the kinetics of charge storage will enable informed design strategies and improve the rate performance of future battery materials. Herein, we study the effects of structural ordering in organic electrode materials on their charge storage mechanisms. A redox active unit, ,'-diphenyl-phenazine, was incorporated into three materials which exhibited varying degrees of ordering.

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Current commercial fuel cells operate in acidic media where Pt-containing compositions have been shown to be the best oxygen reduction reaction (ORR) electrocatalysts, due to their facile reaction kinetics and long-term stability under operating conditions. However, with the development of alkaline membranes, alkaline fuel cells have become a potentially viable alternative that offers the possibility of using Pt-free (precious metal-free) electrocatalysts. However, the search for better electrocatalysts can be very effort-consuming, if we intend to test every potential bi- or trimetallic combination.

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Developing cathodes that can support high charge-discharge rates would improve the power density of lithium-ion batteries. Herein, the development of high-power cathodes without sacrificing energy density is reported. N,N'-diphenylphenazine was identified as a promising charge-storage center by electrochemical studies due to its reversible, fast electron transfer at high potentials.

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Redox-active covalent organic frameworks (COFs) are promising materials for energy storage devices because of their high density of redox sites, permanent and controlled porosity, high surface areas, and tunable structures. However, the low electrochemical accessibility of their redox-active sites has limited COF-based devices either to thin films (<250 nm) grown on conductive substrates or to thicker films (1 μm) when a conductive polymer is introduced into the COF pores. Electrical energy storage devices constructed from bulk microcrystalline COF powders, eliminating the need for both thin-film formation and conductive polymer guests, would offer both improved capacity and potentially scalable fabrication processes.

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