Energy transfer processes in supramolecular light-harvesting systems

<p>This dissertation attempts to understand how energy transfer in a molecular wire and a spherical organic assembly are affected by molecular structure. The molecular wire is a DNA-hybrid structure composed of a strand of thymine bases appended by a cyanine dye. Hydrogen bonded to each base i...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Stevens, A, Amy Stevens
Other Authors: Laura, H
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2011
Subjects:
_version_ 1817932937220325376
author Stevens, A
Amy Stevens
author2 Laura, H
author_facet Laura, H
Stevens, A
Amy Stevens
author_sort Stevens, A
collection OXFORD
description <p>This dissertation attempts to understand how energy transfer in a molecular wire and a spherical organic assembly are affected by molecular structure. The molecular wire is a DNA-hybrid structure composed of a strand of thymine bases appended by a cyanine dye. Hydrogen bonded to each base is a naphthalene-derivative molecule. Using time-integrated photoluminescence and time-correlated single photon counting measurements, energy transfer from the naphthalene donors to the cyanine acceptors was confirmed, and its dependence on temperature and DNA-template length investigated. Donor-thymine bonding was disrupted at temperatures above about 25 degrees Celcius resulting in poor donor template decoration and low rates of energy transfer. Increasing numbers of donors attach to the scaffold, forming an orderly array, as the template length increases due to the stabilising effects of the donor-donor pi-stacking interactions. Conversely, modelled energy transfer rates fall as the scaffold length increases because of the longer donor-acceptor distances involved. Therefore, the energy transfer rate was greatest for a template built from 30 thymines.</p><p>The spherical organic assemblies (nanoparticles) are formed by fast injection of a small volume of molecularly dissolved fluorene-derivative amphiphilic molecules into a polar solvent. The amphiphilic molecules contained either a naphthalene (donor) or a benzothiadiazole (acceptor) core. The donor-acceptor mixed nanoparticles resemble an amorphous polymer film and were modelled as such using the Foerster resonance energy transfer theory. The Foerster radii extracted from the measurements depends intricately on the donor-acceptor spectral overlap and distance. The latter effect was controlled by the stacking interactions between the molecules.</p><p>Altering the morphology of the structural units is the key to optimising energy transfer in molecular structures. To achieve efficient organic molecule-based devices, the importance of this property needs to be fully appreciated and effectively exploited.</p>
first_indexed 2024-03-06T21:27:15Z
format Thesis
id oxford-uuid:43833f3a-96b0-432a-9608-8f08a9096be7
institution University of Oxford
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-09T03:45:51Z
publishDate 2011
record_format dspace
spelling oxford-uuid:43833f3a-96b0-432a-9608-8f08a9096be72024-12-07T17:45:12ZEnergy transfer processes in supramolecular light-harvesting systemsThesishttp://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_db06uuid:43833f3a-96b0-432a-9608-8f08a9096be7Condensed Matter PhysicsEnglishOxford University Research Archive - Valet2011Stevens, AAmy StevensLaura, H<p>This dissertation attempts to understand how energy transfer in a molecular wire and a spherical organic assembly are affected by molecular structure. The molecular wire is a DNA-hybrid structure composed of a strand of thymine bases appended by a cyanine dye. Hydrogen bonded to each base is a naphthalene-derivative molecule. Using time-integrated photoluminescence and time-correlated single photon counting measurements, energy transfer from the naphthalene donors to the cyanine acceptors was confirmed, and its dependence on temperature and DNA-template length investigated. Donor-thymine bonding was disrupted at temperatures above about 25 degrees Celcius resulting in poor donor template decoration and low rates of energy transfer. Increasing numbers of donors attach to the scaffold, forming an orderly array, as the template length increases due to the stabilising effects of the donor-donor pi-stacking interactions. Conversely, modelled energy transfer rates fall as the scaffold length increases because of the longer donor-acceptor distances involved. Therefore, the energy transfer rate was greatest for a template built from 30 thymines.</p><p>The spherical organic assemblies (nanoparticles) are formed by fast injection of a small volume of molecularly dissolved fluorene-derivative amphiphilic molecules into a polar solvent. The amphiphilic molecules contained either a naphthalene (donor) or a benzothiadiazole (acceptor) core. The donor-acceptor mixed nanoparticles resemble an amorphous polymer film and were modelled as such using the Foerster resonance energy transfer theory. The Foerster radii extracted from the measurements depends intricately on the donor-acceptor spectral overlap and distance. The latter effect was controlled by the stacking interactions between the molecules.</p><p>Altering the morphology of the structural units is the key to optimising energy transfer in molecular structures. To achieve efficient organic molecule-based devices, the importance of this property needs to be fully appreciated and effectively exploited.</p>
spellingShingle Condensed Matter Physics
Stevens, A
Amy Stevens
Energy transfer processes in supramolecular light-harvesting systems
title Energy transfer processes in supramolecular light-harvesting systems
title_full Energy transfer processes in supramolecular light-harvesting systems
title_fullStr Energy transfer processes in supramolecular light-harvesting systems
title_full_unstemmed Energy transfer processes in supramolecular light-harvesting systems
title_short Energy transfer processes in supramolecular light-harvesting systems
title_sort energy transfer processes in supramolecular light harvesting systems
topic Condensed Matter Physics
work_keys_str_mv AT stevensa energytransferprocessesinsupramolecularlightharvestingsystems
AT amystevens energytransferprocessesinsupramolecularlightharvestingsystems