There is a current healthcare need for improved prosthetic socket fit provision for the masses using low-cost and simple to manufacture sensors that can measure pressure, shear, and friction. There is also a need to address society's increasing concerns regarding the environmental impact of electronics and IoT devices. Prototype thin, low-cost, and low-weight pressure, shear, and loss of friction sensors have been developed and assembled for trans-femoral amputees.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe slow dissociation of DNA threading intercalators makes them interesting as model compounds in the search for new DNA targeting drugs, as there appears to be a correlation between slow dissociation and biological activity. Thus, it would be of great value to understand the mechanisms controlling threading intercalation, and for this purpose we have investigated how the length of the bridging ligand of binuclear ruthenium threading intercalators affects their DNA binding properties. We have synthesised a new binuclear ruthenium threading intercalator with slower dissociation kinetics from ct-DNA than has ever been observed for any ruthenium complex with any type of DNA, a property that we attribute to the increased distance between the ruthenium centres of the new complex.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA fullerene based Donor-Bridge-Acceptor (DBA) compound, incorporating a π-extended tetrathiafulvalene electron donor, is investigated with respect to its photophysics in solution versus solid state. Solid films of neat DBA are compared with blend films where the DBA compound is diluted in the inert, low dielectric, polymer poly(styrene). It is found that the moderate intermolecular electronic coupling and donor-acceptor separation (22 Å) in this case leads to the generation of more dissociated, intermolecular charges than a mixture of the donor and acceptor reference compounds.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the synthesis and the characterizations of a novel dyad composed of a zinc porphyrin (ZnP) linked to a gold porphyrin (AuP) through an ethynyl spacer. The UV/Vis absorption spectrum and the electrochemical properties clearly reveal that this dyad exhibits a strong electronic coupling in the ground state as evidenced by shifted redox potentials and the appearance of an intense charge-transfer band localized at lambda = 739 nm in dichloromethane. A spectroelectrochemical study of the dyad along with the parent homometallic system (i.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report on photoinduced charge separation in solid films of two perylene diimides; intramolecular charge separation and recombination is correlated with a reduction in the yield of long-lived, intermolecular charge-separated species.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of donor-bridge-acceptor (D-B-A) systems with varying donor-acceptor distances has been studied with respect to the temperature dependence of the triplet excitation energy transfer (TEET) rates. The donor and acceptor, zinc(II) and free-base porphyrin, respectively, were separated by oligo-p-phenyleneethynylene (OPE) bridges, where the number of phenyleneethynylene groups was varied between two and five, giving rise to edge-to-edge separations ranging between 12.7 and 33.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPhys Chem Chem Phys
November 2007
Electron and energy transfer reactions in covalently connected donor-bridge-acceptor assemblies are strongly dependent, not only on the donor-acceptor distance, but also on the electronic structure of the bridge. In this article we describe some well characterised systems where the bridges are pi-conjugated chromophores, and where, specifically, the interplay between bridge length and energy plays an important role for the donor-acceptor electronic coupling. For any application that relies on the transport of electrons, for example molecule based solar cells or molecular scale electronics, it will be imperative to predict the electron transfer capabilities of different molecular structures.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a systematic study of the photophysical parameters relevant to photodynamic therapy (PDT) by a new type of sensitizers, conjugated porphyrin oligomers. Due to the strong nonlinear properties of oligomers containing 2, 4 and 8 porphyrin units, these molecules are attractive candidates for PDT via multiphoton excitation. The triplet state energy levels for all molecules have been determined by the triplet quenching method, phosphorescence measurements and DFT calculations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFully conjugated organic molecules, such as the oligo(phenyleneethynylene) (OPE) systems, are of growing interest within the field of molecular electronics, as is the self-assembly of well-defined molecular thin films with predefined functions. The structure and function of such films are intimately related and governed by the structures of their molecular constituents, through the intermolecular interactions and the interactions between the molecules and the substrate, onto which the film is assembled. Here we report on the synthesis of a series of three OPE derivatives, with the general structure phenylethynylene-aryl-ethynylenephenylene-headgroup, and the structural investigation of the self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) formed from them on Au(111) surfaces.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe DNA binding conformation and the photophysical properties of the semiflexible binuclear ruthenium complex [micro-bidppz(phen)4Ru2]4+ (2) were studied with optical spectroscopy and compared to the rigid, planar homologue in syn conformation [micro-dtpf(phen)4Ru2]4+ (3) and the parent "light-switch" complex [Ru(phen)2dppz]2+ (1). Comparison of calculated and observed absorption bands of the bridging ligand, bidppz, confirm earlier suggestions that 2 is significantly nonplanar, both free in solution and when intercalated into poly(dAdT)2, but the conclusion that the intercalated conformation is an anti rotamer is not substantiated by comparison of linear and circular dichroism spectra of 2 and 3. The behavior of the emission quantum yield as a function of temperature is similar for the two binuclear complexes 2 and 3 in different protic solvents, and a quantitative analysis suggests that, in solution, the solvent is more strongly hydrogen bonded to the excited state of 2 than to 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAngew Chem Int Ed Engl
August 2006
The quenching of the luminescence of [Ru(phen)(2)dppz](2+) by structural homologue [Ru(phendione)(2)dppz](2+), when both complexes are bound to DNA, has been studied for all four combinations of Delta and Lambda enantiomers. Flow linear dichroism spectroscopy (LD) indicates similar binding geometries for all the four compounds, with the dppz ligand fully intercalated between the DNA base pairs. A difference in the LD spectrum observed for the lowest-energy MLCT transition suggests that a transition, potentially related to the final localization of the excited electron to the dppz ligand in [Ru(phen)(2)dppz](2+), is overlaid by an orthogonally polarized transition in [Ru(phendione)(2)dppz](2+).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGold porphyrins are often used as electron-accepting chromophores in donor-acceptor complexes for the study of photoinduced electron transfer, and they can also be involved in triplet-triplet energy-transfer interactions with other chromophores. Since the lowest excited singlet state is very short-lived (240 fs), the triplet state is usually the starting point for the transfer reactions, and it is therefore crucial to understand its photophysics. The triplet state of various gold porphyrins has been reported to have a lifetime of around 1.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA series of donor--bridge--acceptor (D--B--A) systems with varying donor-acceptor distances have been studied with respect to their triplet energy transfer properties. The donor and acceptor moieties, zinc(II), and free-base porphyrin, respectively, were separated by 2-5 oligo-p-phenyleneethynylene units (OPE) giving rise to edge-to-edge separations ranging between 12.7 and 33.
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