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Dive into the research topics where Alexander Giovannitti is active.

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Featured researches published by Alexander Giovannitti.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2016

Controlling the mode of operation of organic transistors through side-chain engineering

Alexander Giovannitti; Dan Tiberiu Sbircea; Sahika Inal; Christian B. Nielsen; Enrico Bandiello; David Hanifi; Michele Sessolo; George G. Malliaras; Iain McCulloch; Jonathan Rivnay

Significance Side-chain engineering is a versatile tool to modify the processability, as well as the physical, electrical, and optical properties, of conjugated polymers. This approach is used to tailor the operating mechanism of electrolyte-gated organic transistors, allowing for facile bulk doping and therefore efficient modulation of transistor channel conductance. Such transistors combine fast response with high current-to-voltage signal transduction necessary for active sensing and low-power circuit applications. Electrolyte-gated organic transistors offer low bias operation facilitated by direct contact of the transistor channel with an electrolyte. Their operation mode is generally defined by the dimensionality of charge transport, where a field-effect transistor allows for electrostatic charge accumulation at the electrolyte/semiconductor interface, whereas an organic electrochemical transistor (OECT) facilitates penetration of ions into the bulk of the channel, considered a slow process, leading to volumetric doping and electronic transport. Conducting polymer OECTs allow for fast switching and high currents through incorporation of excess, hygroscopic ionic phases, but operate in depletion mode. Here, we show that the use of glycolated side chains on a thiophene backbone can result in accumulation mode OECTs with high currents, transconductance, and sharp subthreshold switching, while maintaining fast switching speeds. Compared with alkylated analogs of the same backbone, the triethylene glycol side chains shift the mode of operation of aqueous electrolyte-gated transistors from interfacial to bulk doping/transport and show complete and reversible electrochromism and high volumetric capacitance at low operating biases. We propose that the glycol side chains facilitate hydration and ion penetration, without compromising electronic mobility, and suggest that this synthetic approach can be used to guide the design of organic mixed conductors.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Molecular Design of Semiconducting Polymers for High-Performance Organic Electrochemical Transistors

Christian B. Nielsen; Alexander Giovannitti; Dan Tiberiu Sbircea; Enrico Bandiello; Muhammad R. Niazi; David Hanifi; Michele Sessolo; Aram Amassian; George G. Malliaras; Jonathan Rivnay; Iain McCulloch

The organic electrochemical transistor (OECT), capable of transducing small ionic fluxes into electronic signals in an aqueous environment, is an ideal device to utilize in bioelectronic applications. Currently, most OECTs are fabricated with commercially available conducting poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT)-based suspensions and are therefore operated in depletion mode. Here, we present a series of semiconducting polymers designed to elucidate important structure–property guidelines required for accumulation mode OECT operation. We discuss key aspects relating to OECT performance such as ion and hole transport, electrochromic properties, operational voltage, and stability. The demonstration of our molecular design strategy is the fabrication of accumulation mode OECTs that clearly outperform state-of-the-art PEDOT-based devices, and show stability under aqueous operation without the need for formulation additives and cross-linkers.


Nature Communications | 2016

N-type organic electrochemical transistors with stability in water.

Alexander Giovannitti; Christian B. Nielsen; Dan-Tiberiu Sbircea; Sahika Inal; Mary J. Donahue; Muhammad R. Niazi; David Hanifi; Aram Amassian; George G. Malliaras; Jonathan Rivnay; Iain McCulloch

Organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs) are receiving significant attention due to their ability to efficiently transduce biological signals. A major limitation of this technology is that only p-type materials have been reported, which precludes the development of complementary circuits, and limits sensor technologies. Here, we report the first ever n-type OECT, with relatively balanced ambipolar charge transport characteristics based on a polymer that supports both hole and electron transport along its backbone when doped through an aqueous electrolyte and in the presence of oxygen. This new semiconducting polymer is designed specifically to facilitate ion transport and promote electrochemical doping. Stability measurements in water show no degradation when tested for 2 h under continuous cycling. This demonstration opens the possibility to develop complementary circuits based on OECTs and to improve the sophistication of bioelectronic devices.


ACS energy letters | 2018

Enhanced n-Doping Efficiency of a Naphthalenediimide-Based Copolymer through Polar Side Chains for Organic Thermoelectrics

David Kiefer; Alexander Giovannitti; Hengda Sun; Till Biskup; Anna I. Hofmann; Marten Koopmans; Camila Cendra; Stefan Weber; L. Jan Anton Koster; Eva Olsson; Jonathan Rivnay; Simone Fabiano; Iain McCulloch; Christian Müller

N-doping of conjugated polymers either requires a high dopant fraction or yields a low electrical conductivity because of their poor compatibility with molecular dopants. We explore n-doping of the polar naphthalenediimide–bithiophene copolymer p(gNDI-gT2) that carries oligoethylene glycol-based side chains and show that the polymer displays superior miscibility with the benzimidazole–dimethylbenzenamine-based n-dopant N-DMBI. The good compatibility of p(gNDI-gT2) and N-DMBI results in a relatively high doping efficiency of 13% for n-dopants, which leads to a high electrical conductivity of more than 10–1 S cm–1 for a dopant concentration of only 10 mol % when measured in an inert atmosphere. We find that the doped polymer is able to maintain its electrical conductivity for about 20 min when exposed to air and recovers rapidly when returned to a nitrogen atmosphere. Overall, solution coprocessing of p(gNDI-gT2) and N-DMBI results in a larger thermoelectric power factor of up to 0.4 μW K–2 m–1 compared to other NDI-based polymers.


Chemistry of Materials | 2018

The Role of the Side Chain on the Performance of N-type Conjugated Polymers in Aqueous Electrolytes

Alexander Giovannitti; Iuliana P. Maria; David Hanifi; Mary J. Donahue; Daniel Bryant; Katrina J. Barth; Beatrice E. Makdah; Achilleas Savva; Davide Moia; Matyáš Zetek; Piers R. F. Barnes; Obadiah G. Reid; Sahika Inal; Garry Rumbles; George G. Malliaras; Jenny Nelson; Jonathan Rivnay; Iain McCulloch

We report a design strategy that allows the preparation of solution processable n-type materials from low boiling point solvents for organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs). The polymer backbone is based on NDI-T2 copolymers where a branched alkyl side chain is gradually exchanged for a linear ethylene glycol-based side chain. A series of random copolymers was prepared with glycol side chain percentages of 0, 10, 25, 50, 75, 90, and 100 with respect to the alkyl side chains. These were characterized to study the influence of the polar side chains on interaction with aqueous electrolytes, their electrochemical redox reactions, and performance in OECTs when operated in aqueous electrolytes. We observed that glycol side chain percentages of >50% are required to achieve volumetric charging, while lower glycol chain percentages show a mixed operation with high required voltages to allow for bulk charging of the organic semiconductor. A strong dependence of the electron mobility on the fraction of glycol chains was found for copolymers based on NDI-T2, with a significant drop as alkyl side chains are replaced by glycol side chains.


Science Advances | 2018

Direct metabolite detection with an n-type accumulation mode organic electrochemical transistor

Anna Maria Pappa; David Ohayon; Alexander Giovannitti; Iuliana P. Maria; Achilleas Savva; Ilke Uguz; Jonathan Rivnay; Iain McCulloch; Róisín M. Owens; Sahika Inal

This is the first ever demonstration of an accumulation mode OECT for biosensing and n-type polymer in electrocatalysis. The inherent specificity and electrochemical reversibility of enzymes poise them as the biorecognition element of choice for a wide range of metabolites. To use enzymes efficiently in biosensors, the redox centers of the protein should have good electrical communication with the transducing electrode, which requires either the use of mediators or tedious biofunctionalization approaches. We report an all-polymer micrometer-scale transistor platform for the detection of lactate, a significant metabolite in cellular metabolic pathways associated with critical health care conditions. The device embodies a new concept in metabolite sensing where we take advantage of the ion-to-electron transducing qualities of an electron-transporting (n-type) organic semiconductor and the inherent amplification properties of an ion-to-electron converting device, the organic electrochemical transistor. The n-type polymer incorporates hydrophilic side chains to enhance ion transport/injection, as well as to facilitate enzyme conjugation. The material is capable of accepting electrons of the enzymatic reaction and acts as a series of redox centers capable of switching between the neutral and reduced state. The result is a fast, selective, and sensitive metabolite sensor. The advantage of this device compared to traditional amperometric sensors is the amplification of the input signal endowed by the electrochemical transistor circuit and the design simplicity obviating the need for a reference electrode. The combination of redox enzymes and electron-transporting polymers will open up an avenue not only for the field of biosensors but also for the development of enzyme-based electrocatalytic energy generation/storage devices.


Advanced Science | 2018

Subthreshold Operation of Organic Electrochemical Transistors for Biosignal Amplification

Vishak Venkatraman; Jacob T. Friedlein; Alexander Giovannitti; Iuliana P. Maria; Iain McCulloch; Robert R. McLeod; Jonathan Rivnay

Abstract With a host of new materials being investigated as active layers in organic electrochemical transistors (OECTs), several advantageous characteristics can be utilized to improve transduction and circuit level performance for biosensing applications. Here, the subthreshold region of operation of one recently reported high performing OECT material, poly(2‐(3,3′‐bis(2‐(2‐(2‐methoxyethoxy)ethoxy)ethoxy)‐[2,2′‐bithiophen]‐5‐yl)thieno[3,2‐b]thiophene), p(g2T‐TT) is investigated. The materials high subthreshold slope (SS) is exploited for high voltage gain and low power consumption. An ≈5× improvement in voltage gain (A V) for devices engineered for equal output current and 370× lower power consumption in the subthreshold region, in comparison to operation in the higher transconductance (g m), superthreshold region usually reported in the literature, are reported. Electrophysiological sensing is demonstrated using the subthreshold regime of p(g2T‐TT) devices and it is suggested that operation in this regime enables low power, enhanced sensing for a broad range of bioelectronic applications. Finally, the accessibility of the subthreshold regime of p(g2T‐TT) is evaluated in comparison with the prototypical poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS), and the role of material design in achieving favorable properties for subthreshold operation is discussed.


Advanced Functional Materials | 2016

Sodium and Potassium Ion Selective Conjugated Polymers for Optical Ion Detection in Solution and Solid State

Alexander Giovannitti; Christian B. Nielsen; Jonathan Rivnay; Mindaugas Kirkus; David J. Harkin; Andrew J. P. White; Henning Sirringhaus; George G. Malliaras; Iain McCulloch


Advanced Functional Materials | 2018

Redox‐Stability of Alkoxy‐BDT Copolymers and their Use for Organic Bioelectronic Devices

Alexander Giovannitti; Karl J. Thorley; Christian B. Nielsen; Jun Li; Mary J. Donahue; George G. Malliaras; Jonathan Rivnay; Iain McCulloch


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Liquid–Solid Dual-Gate Organic Transistors with Tunable Threshold Voltage for Cell Sensing

Yu Zhang; Jun Li; Rui Li; Dan-Tiberiu Sbircea; Alexander Giovannitti; Junling Xu; Huihua Xu; Guodong Zhou; Liming Bian; Iain McCulloch; Ni Zhao

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Iain McCulloch

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Sahika Inal

King Abdullah University of Science and Technology

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Christian B. Nielsen

Queen Mary University of London

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Mary J. Donahue

École Normale Supérieure

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Achilleas Savva

Cyprus University of Technology

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