Alex Volosin
Arizona State University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Alex Volosin.
Chemical Communications | 2011
Patrick Kwan; Dominik Schmitt; Alex Volosin; Chelsea L. McIntosh; Dong Kyun Seo; Anne K. Jones
Stable immobilization of two redox proteins, cytochrome c and azurin, in a thin film of highly mesoporous antimony-doped tin oxide is demonstrated via UV-vis spectroscopic and electrochemical investigation.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013
Sudhanshu Sharma; Alex Volosin; Dominik Schmitt; Dong Kyun Seo
Nanoporous antimony-doped tin oxide (ATO) coatings with high surface area, optical transparency and electron transfer properties have been prepared using an interpenetrating inorganic–organic hybrid sol–gel approach. UV-Vis and X-ray photoelectron spectroscopic studies were carried out on the prepared materials in addition to the characterization of their microstructures with scanning electron microscopy, transmission electron microscopy, and nitrogen sorption experiments. Cyclic voltammetry (CV) and impedance spectroscopy were employed to characterize the electrochemical and electron transfer properties of the coatings in both acidic and neutral media with an Fe3+/Fe2+ redox couple. The material had a specific surface area of over 90 m2 g−1 with a bimodal pore distribution with two distinctive peaks at ca. 8 and 40 nm. The electrochemical capacitance of the material was about 100 times as high as the value obtained for a commercially available nonporous fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO) electrode. The estimated electron transfer rate of the former was three times larger than that of the FTO. The optical transparency, high surface area and high electron transfer rate of the nanoporous ATO coatings make the material well suited for diverse photoelectrochemical applications.
ACS Nano | 2011
Chad R. Simmons; Dominik Schmitt; Xixi Wei; Dongran Han; Alex Volosin; Danielle M. Ladd; Dong Kyun Seo; Yan Liu; Hao Yan
A conductive nanoporous antimony-doped tin oxide (ATO) powder has been prepared using the sol-gel method that contains three-dimensionally interconnected pores within the metal oxide and highly tunable pore sizes on the nanoscale. It is demonstrated that these porous materials possess the capability of hosting a tetrahedral-shaped DNA nanostructure of defined dimensions with high affinity. The tunability of pore size enables the porous substrate to selectively absorb the DNA nanostructures into the metal oxide cavities or exclude them from entering the surface layer. Both confocal fluorescence microscopy and solution FRET experiments revealed that the DNA nanostructures maintained their integrity upon the size-selective incorporation into the cavities of the porous materials. As DNA nanostructures can serve as a stable three-dimensional nanoscaffold for the coordination of electron transfer mediators, this work opens up new possibilities of incorporating functionalized DNA architectures as guest molecules to nanoporous conductive metal oxides for applications such as photovoltaics, sensors, and solar fuel cells.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016
Anne Marie Carey; Haojie Zhang; Daniel G. Mieritz; Alex Volosin; Alastair T. Gardiner; Richard J. Cogdell; Hao Yan; Dong Kyun Seo; Su Lin; Neal W. Woodbury
The ability to exchange energy and information between biological and electronic materials is critical in the development of hybrid electronic systems in biomedicine, environmental sensing, and energy applications. While sensor technology has been extensively developed to collect detailed molecular information, less work has been done on systems that can specifically modulate the chemistry of the environment with temporal and spatial control. The bacterial photosynthetic reaction center represents an ideal photonic component of such a system in that it is capable of modifying local chemistry via light-driven redox reactions with quantitative control over reaction rates and has inherent spectroscopic probes for monitoring function. Here a well-characterized model system is presented, consisting of a transparent, porous electrode (antimony-doped tin oxide) which is electrochemically coupled to the reaction center via a cytochrome c molecule. Upon illumination, the reaction center performs the 2-step, 2-electron reduction of a ubiquinone derivative which exchanges with oxidized quinone in solution. Electrons from the electrode then move through the cytochrome to reoxidize the reaction center electron donor. The result is a facile platform for performing redox chemistry that can be optically and electronically controlled in time and space.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2015
Barun Das; Adęle Renaud; Alex Volosin; Lei Yu; Nathan Newman; Dong Kyun Seo
Nanoporous structures of a p-type semiconductor, delafossite CuAlO(2), with a high crystallinity have been fabricated through an inorganic/polymer double-gel process and characterized for the first time via Mott-Schottky measurements. The effect of the precursor concentration, calcination temperature, and atmosphere were examined to achieve high crystallinity and photoelectrochemical properties while maximizing the porosity. The optical properties of the nanoporous CuAlO(2) are in good agreement with the literature with an optical band gap of 3.9 eV, and the observed high electrical conductivity and hole concentrations conform to highly crystalline and well-sintered nanoparticles observed in the product. The Mott-Schottky plot from the electrochemical impedance spectroscopy studies indicates a flat-band potential of 0.49 V versus Ag/AgCl. It is concluded that CuAlO(2) exhibits band energies very close to those of NiO but with electrical properties very desirable in the fabrication of photoelectrochemical devices including dye-sensitized solar cells.
Langmuir | 2017
Daniel G. Mieritz; Xiang Li; Alex Volosin; Minghui Liu; Hao Yan; Nils G. Walter; Dong Kyun Seo
Housing bio-nano guest devices based on DNA nanostructures within porous, conducting, inorganic host materials promise valuable applications in solar energy conversion, chemical catalysis, and analyte sensing. Herein, we report a single-template synthetic development of hierarchically porous, transparent conductive metal oxide coatings whose pores are freely accessible by large biomacromolecules. Their hierarchal pore structure is bimodal with a larger number of closely packed open macropores (∼200 nm) at the higher rank and with the remaining space being filled with a gel network of antimony-doped tin oxide (ATO) nanoparticles that is highly porous with a broad size range of textual pores mainly from 20-100 nm at the lower rank. The employed carbon black template not only creates the large open macropores but also retains the highly structured gel network as holey pore walls. Single molecule fluorescence microscopic studies with fluorophore-labeled DNA nanotweezers reveal a detailed view of multimodal diffusion dynamics of the biomacromolecules inside the hierarchically porous structure. Two diffusion constants were parsed from trajectory analyses that were attributed to free diffusion (diffusion constant D = 2.2 μm2/s) and to diffusion within an average confinement length of 210 nm (D = 0.12 μm2/s), consistent with the average macropore size of the coating. Despite its holey nature, the ATO gel network acts as an efficient barrier to the diffusion of the DNA nanostructures, which is strongly indicative of physical interactions between the molecules and the pore nanostructure.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2011
Alex Volosin; Sudhanshu Sharma; Christopher Traverse; Nathan Newman; Dong Kyun Seo
Archive | 2011
Dong Kyun Seo; Alex Volosin
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2010
Danielle M. Ladd; Alex Volosin; Dong Kyun Seo
Archive | 2010
Dong Kyun Seo; Alex Volosin