Amod Timalsina
Northwestern University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Amod Timalsina.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Nanjia Zhou; Kumaresan Prabakaran; Byunghong Lee; Sheng Hsiung Chang; Boris Harutyunyan; Peijun Guo; Melanie R. Butler; Amod Timalsina; Michael J. Bedzyk; Mark A. Ratner; Sureshraju Vegiraju; Shuehlin Yau; Chun Guey Wu; R. P. H. Chang; Antonio Facchetti; Ming Chou Chen; Tobin J. Marks
A new series of metal-free organic chromophores (TPA-TTAR-A (1), TPA-T-TTAR-A (2), TPA-TTAR-T-A (3), and TPA-T-TTAR-T-A (4)) are synthesized for application in dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSC) based on a donor-π-bridge-acceptor (D-π-A) design. Here a simple triphenylamine (TPA) moiety serves as the electron donor, a cyanoacrylic acid as the electron acceptor and anchoring group, and a novel tetrathienoacene (TTA) as the π-bridge unit. Because of the extensively conjugated TTA π-bridge, these dyes exhibit high extinction coefficients (4.5-5.2 × 10(4) M(-1) cm(-1)). By strategically inserting a thiophene spacer on the donor or acceptor side of the molecules, the electronic structures of these TTA-based dyes can be readily tuned. Furthermore, addition of a thiophene spacer has a significant influence on the dye orientation and self-assembly modality on TiO2 surfaces. The insertion of a thiophene between the π-bridge and the cyanoacrylic acid anchoring group in TPA-TTAR-T-A (dye 3) promotes more vertical dye orientation and denser packing on TiO2 (molecular footprint = 79 Å(2)), thus enabling optimal dye loading. Using dye 3, a DSSC power conversion efficiency (PCE) of 10.1% with Voc = 0.833 V, Jsc = 16.5 mA/cm(2), and FF = 70.0% is achieved, among the highest reported to date for metal-free organic DSSC sensitizers using an I(-)/I3(-) redox shuttle. Photophysical measurements on dye-grafted TiO2 films reveal that the additional thiophene unit in dye 3 enhances the electron injection efficiency, in agreement with the high quantum efficiency.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2017
Stephen Loser; Sylvia J. Lou; Brett M. Savoie; Carson J. Bruns; Amod Timalsina; Matthew J. Leonardi; Jeremy Smith; Tobias Harschneck; Riccardo Turrisi; Nanjia Zhou; Charlotte L. Stern; Amy A. Sarjeant; Antonio Facchetti; R. P. H. Chang; Samuel I. Stupp; Mark A. Ratner; Lin X. Chen; Tobin J. Marks
Improved understanding of fundamental structure–property relationships, particularly the effects of molecular shape and intermolecular packing on film morphology and active layer charge transport characteristics, enables more rational synthesis of new p-type small molecules. Here we investigate a series of small molecules consisting of an acene-based electron-rich core flanked by one or two electron-deficient diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) moieties. Through minor changes in the molecule structures, measurable variations in the crystal structure and sizable differences in macroscopic properties are achieved. The molecular symmetry as well as the conformation of the side chains affects the unit cell packing density and strength of the intermolecular electronic coupling in single crystals of all molecules in this series. The addition of a second DPP unit to the benzodithiophene (BDT) core increases molecular planarity leading to decreased reorganization energy, strong cofacial coupling, and moderate hole mobility (2.7 × 10−4 cm2 V−1 s−1). Increasing the length of the acene core from benzodithiophene to naphthodithiophene (NDT) results in a further reduction in reorganization energy and formation of smaller crystalline domains (∼11 nm) when mixed with PCBM. Decreasing the aspect ratio of the core using a “zig-zag” naphthodithiophene (zNDT) isomer results in the highest hole mobility of 1.3 × 10−3 cm2 V−1 s−1 due in part to tight lamellar (d = 13.5 A) and π–π stacking (d = 3.9 A). The hole mobility is directly correlated with the short-circuit current (11.7 mA cm−2) and solar cell efficiency (4.4%) of the highest performing zNDT:PCBM device. For each of these small molecules the calculated π-coupling constant is correlated with the hole mobility as a function of crystal structure and orientation indicating the importance of designing molecules that create extended crystalline networks with maximal π-orbital overlap.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016
Alberto Riaño; Iratxe Arrechea-Marcos; María J. Mancheño; Paula Mayorga Burrezo; Alejandro de la Peña; Stephen Loser; Amod Timalsina; Antonio Facchetti; Tobin J. Marks; Juan Casado; J. Teodomiro López Navarrete; Rocío Ponce Ortiz; José L. Segura
The synthesis, characterization, and optical properties of a novel star-shaped oligothiophene with a central rigid trithienobenzene (BTT) core and diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) units are reported and compared with homologous linear systems based on the benzodithiophene (BDT) and the naphthodithiophene (NDT) units end capped with DPPs. This comparison is aimed at elucidating the effect of the star-shaped configuration versus linear conformation on the optical and electrical properties. Electronic and vibrational spectroscopies, together with transient absorption spectroscopy, scanning electronic microscopy, and DFT calculations are used to understand not only the molecular properties of these semiconductors, but also to analyze the supramolecular aggregation in these derivatives. We conclude that although the subject star-shaped derivative is not optimal in terms of π-conjugation, its extended BTT unit significantly favors intermolecular π-stacking interactions, which is interesting for their applications in devices. Field-effect transistors and solar cells were fabricated with these new molecular semiconductors and the performance difference discussed.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014
Patrick E. Hartnett; Amod Timalsina; H. S. S. Ramakrishna Matte; Nanjia Zhou; Xugang Guo; Wei Zhao; Antonio Facchetti; R. P. H. Chang; Mark C. Hersam; Michael R. Wasielewski; Tobin J. Marks
Chemical Communications | 2014
Tobias Harschneck; Nanjia Zhou; Eric F. Manley; Sylvia J. Lou; Xinge Yu; Melanie R. Butler; Amod Timalsina; Riccardo Turrisi; Mark A. Ratner; Lin X. Chen; R. P. H. Chang; Antonio Facchetti; Tobin J. Marks
Journal of Materials Chemistry C | 2014
Alberto Riaño; P. Mayorga Burrezo; María J. Mancheño; Amod Timalsina; Jeremy Smith; Antonio Facchetti; Tobin J. Marks; J.T. López Navarrete; José L. Segura; Juan Casado; R. Ponce Ortiz
Chemical Communications | 2014
Tobias Harschneck; Nanjia Zhou; Eric F. Manley; Sylvia J. Lou; Xinge Yu; Melanie R. Butler; Amod Timalsina; Riccardo Turrisi; Mark A. Ratner; Lin X. Chen; R. P. H. Chang; Antonio Facchetti; Tobin J. Marks
Physical Review B | 2013
Ahmet Uysal; Miaoqi Chu; Benjamin Stripe; Amod Timalsina; Sudeshna Chattopadhyay; Christian M. Schlepütz; Tobin J. Marks; Pulak Dutta
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2013
Charles Kiseok Song; Alicia C. White; Li Zeng; Benjamin J. Leever; Michael D. Clark; Jonathan D. Emery; Sylvia J. Lou; Amod Timalsina; Lin X. Chen; Michael J. Bedzyk; Tobin J. Marks
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014
Nanjia Zhou; Byunghong Lee; Amod Timalsina; Peijun Guo; Xinge Yu; Tobin J. Marks; Antonio Facchetti; R. P. H. Chang