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Congratulations to Dilek!

Posted by on Thursday, November 29, 2018 in Uncategorized.

Today Dilek’s paper “Polyviologen as Electron Transport Material in Photosystem I-Based Biophotovoltaic Cells” was published in Langmuir. Below is the abstract and the DOI!

 

Polyviologen as Electron Transport Material in Photosystem I-Based Biophotovoltaic Cells

Dilek Dervishogullari,† Evan A. Gizzie,†,§ G. Kane Jennings,‡ and David E. Cliffel*,†
†Department of Chemistry, and ‡Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee 37235-1822, United States

Abstract

The photosynthetic protein complex, photosystem I (PSI), can be photoexcited with a quantum efficiency approaching unity and can be integrated into solar energy conversion devices as the photoactive electrode. The incorporation of PSI into conducting polymer frameworks allows for improved conductivity and orientational control in the photoactive layer. Polyviologens are a unique class of organic polycationic polymers that can rapidly accept electrons from a primary donor such as photoexcited PSI and subsequently can donate them to a secondary acceptor. Monomeric viologens, such as methyl viologen, have been widely used as diffusible mediators in wet PSI-based photoelectrochemical cells on the basis of their suitable redox potentials for accepting electrons. Polyviologens possess similar electronic properties to their monomers with the added advantage that they can shuttle electrons in the solid state. Depositing polyviologen directly onto a film of PSI protein results in significant photocurrent enhancement, which confirms its role as an electron-transport material. The polymer film not only improves the photocurrent by aiding the electron transfer but also helps preserve the protein film underneath. The composite polymer–PSI assembly enhances the charge-shuttling processes from individual protein molecules within the PSI multilayer, greatly reducing charge-transfer resistances. The resulting PSI-based solid-state platform demonstrates a much higher photocurrent than the corresponding photoelectrochemical cell built using a similar architecture.

Langmuir 2018 34, 51, 15658-15664

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.langmuir.8b02967

 

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