Bailey Risteen
Georgia Institute of Technology
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Publication
Featured researches published by Bailey Risteen.
Biomacromolecules | 2017
Bailey Risteen; Alyssa Blake; Michael McBride; Cornelia Rosu; Jung Ok Park; Mohan Srinivasarao; Paul S. Russo; Elsa Reichmanis
Cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) are bioderived, rodlike particles that form a chiral nematic liquid crystal (LC) in water. In this work, CNCs were used to induce long-range order in a semiconducting polymer, poly[3-(potassium-4-butanoate) thiophene-2,5-diyl] (PPBT). When mixed with CNCs, it was found that PPBT was incorporated into the liquid crystal template to form ordered structures with highly birefringent domains, as observed under polarized light. We show that the π-π interactions between polymer chains, which contribute considerably to the energetics of the semiconducting system, are directly influenced by the presence and packing of the liquid crystal phase. Upon increasing the concentration of CNCs from the isotropic to chiral nematic regime, we observe a bathochromic shift in the UV-vis spectra and the emergence of the 0-0 vibrational peak, suggesting enhanced π-π stacking leading to chain coplanarization. Furthermore, the chiral nature of the PPBT/CNC mixture was evidenced by a negative peak in circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy, promoting the notion that the polymer chains followed the helicoidal twist of the chiral nematic liquid crystal host. At high temperatures, the peak height ratios and overall intensities of the UV-vis and CD spectra associated with PPBT decreased as the chiral nematic pitch grew larger in size.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Nils Persson; Joshua Rafshoon; Kaylie Naghshpour; Tony Fast; Ping-Hsun Chu; Michael McBride; Bailey Risteen; Martha A. Grover; Elsa Reichmanis
High-throughput discovery of process-structure-property relationships in materials through an informatics-enabled empirical approach is an increasingly utilized technique in materials research due to the rapidly expanding availability of data. Here, process-structure-property relationships are extracted for the nucleation, growth, and deposition of semiconducting poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) nanofibers used in organic field effect transistors, via high-throughput image analysis. This study is performed using an automated image analysis pipeline combining existing open-source software and new algorithms, enabling the rapid evaluation of structural metrics for images of fibrillar materials, including local orientational order, fiber length density, and fiber length distributions. We observe that microfluidic processing leads to fibers that pack with unusually high density, while sonication yields fibers that pack sparsely with low alignment. This is attributed to differences in their crystallization mechanisms. P3HT nanofiber packing during thin film deposition exhibits behavior suggesting that fibers are confined to packing in two-dimensional layers. We find that fiber alignment, a feature correlated with charge carrier mobility, is driven by increasing fiber length, and that shorter fibers tend to segregate to the buried dielectric interface during deposition, creating potentially performance-limiting defects in alignment. Another barrier to perfect alignment is the curvature of P3HT fibers; we propose a mechanistic simulation of fiber growth that reconciles both this curvature and the log-normal distribution of fiber lengths inherent to the fiber populations under consideration.
Small | 2018
Bailey Risteen; Gwendoline Delepierre; Mohan Srinivasarao; Christoph Weder; Paul S. Russo; Elsa Reichmanis; Justin O. Zoppe
A thermally switchable liquid-crystalline (LC) phase is observed in aqueous suspensions of cellulose nanocrystals (CNCs) featuring patchy grafts of the thermoresponsive polymer poly(N-isopropylacrylamide) (PNIPAM). Patchy polymer decoration of the CNCs is achieved by preferential attachment of an atom transfer radical polymerization (ATRP) initiator to the ends of the rods and subsequent surface-initiated ATRP. The patchy PNIPAM-grafted CNCs display a higher colloidal stability above the lower critical solution temperature (LCST) of PNIPAM than CNCs decorated with PNIPAM in a brush-like manner. A 10 wt% suspension of the patchy PNIPAM-modified CNCs displays birefringence at room temperature, indicating the presence of an LC phase. When heated above the LCST of PNIPAM, the birefringence disappears, indicating the transition to an isotropic phase. This switching is reversible and appears to be driven by the collapse of the PNIPAM chains above the LCST, causing a reduction of the rods packing density and an increase in translational and rotational freedom. Suspensions of the brush PNIPAM-modified CNCs display a different behavior. Heating above the LCST causes phase separation, likely because the chain collapse renders the particles more hydrophobic. The thermal switching observed for the patchy PNIPAM-modified CNCs is unprecedented and possibly useful for sensing and smart packaging applications.
Chemistry of Materials | 2017
Guoyan Zhang; Michael McBride; Nils Persson; Savannah Lee; Tim J. Dunn; Michael F. Toney; Zhibo Yuan; Yo-Han Kwon; Ping-Hsun Chu; Bailey Risteen; Elsa Reichmanis
Chemistry of Materials | 2016
Guoyan Zhang; Ho-Yee Hui; Ping-Hsun Chu; Zhibo Yuan; Rui Chang; Bailey Risteen; Huai Yang; Elsa Reichmanis
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Bailey Risteen; Jung Ok Park; Mohan Srinivasarao; Paul S. Russo; Elsa Reichmanis
Bulletin of the American Physical Society | 2017
Bailey Risteen; Alyssa Blake; Michael McBride; Cornelia Rosu; Jung Ok Park; Mohan Srinivasarao; Paul S. Russo; Elsa Reichmanis
Corrosion | 2015
Eric John Schindelholz; Bailey Risteen; Robert G. Kelly
228th ECS Meeting (October 11-15, 2015) | 2015
Eric Schindelholz; Bailey Risteen; Robert G. Kelly
224th ECS Meeting (October 27 – November 1, 2013) | 2014
Bailey Risteen; Eric Schindelholz; Robert G. Kelly