Daniel B. Tice
Northwestern University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Daniel B. Tice.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Kathryn E. Knowles; Daniel B. Tice; Eric A. McArthur; Gemma C. Solomon; Emily A. Weiss
Replacement of the native (as-synthesized) ligands of colloidal CdSe QDs with varying concentrations of a series of para-substituted anilines (R-An), where R ranges from strongly electron-withdrawing to strongly electron-donating, decreases the PL of the QDs. The molar ratio of R-An to QD ([R-An]:[QD]) at which the PL decreases by 50% shifts by 4 orders of magnitude over the series R-An. The model employed to describe the data combines a Freundlich binding isotherm (which reflects the dependence of the binding affinity of the amine headgroups of R-An on the substituent R) with a function that describes the response of the PL to R-An ligands once they are bound at their equilibrium surface coverage. The latter function includes as a parameter the rate constant, k(nr), for nonradiative decay of the exciton at a site to which an R-An ligand is coordinated. The value of this parameter reveals that the predominant mechanism of QD-ligand interaction is passivation of Cd(2+) surface sites through sigma-donation for R-An ligands with R = H, Br, OCF(3), and reductive quenching through photoinduced hole transfer for R = MeO, (Me)(2)N.
ACS Nano | 2011
Mario Tagliazucchi; Daniel B. Tice; Christina M. Sweeney; Adam J. Morris-Cohen; Emily A. Weiss
This paper describes a study of the rates of photoinduced electron transfer (PET) from CdSe quantum dots (QDs) to poly(viologen) within thin films, as a function of the length of the ligands passivating the QDs. Ultrafast (<10 ps), quantitative PET occurs from CdSe QDs coated with HS-(CH(2))(n)-COOH for n = 1, 2, 5, and 7 to viologen units. The observed decrease in the magnitude of the PET rate constant with n is weaker than that expected from the decay of the electron tunneling probability across extended all-trans mercaptocarboxylic acids but well-described by electron tunneling across a collapsed ligand shell. The PET rate constants for films with n = 10 and 15 are much slower than those expected based on the trend for n = 1-7; this deviation is ascribed to the formation of bundles of ligands on the surface of the QD that make the tunneling process prohibitively slow by limiting access of the viologen units to the surfaces of the QDs. This study highlights the importance of molecular-level morphology of donor and acceptor materials in determining the rate and yield of interfacial photoinduced electron transfer in thin films.
Nano Letters | 2014
Daniel B. Tice; Shi Qiang Li; Mario Tagliazucchi; D. Bruce Buchholz; Emily A. Weiss; R. P. H. Chang
Light-matter interaction at the nanoscale is of particular interest for future photonic integrated circuits and devices with applications ranging from communication to sensing and imaging. In this Letter a combination of transient absorption (TA) and the use of third harmonic generation as a probe (THG-probe) has been adopted to investigate the response of the localized surface plasmon resonances (LSPRs) of vertically aligned indium tin oxide rods (ITORs) upon ultraviolet light (UV) excitation. TA experiments, which are sensitive to the extinction of the LSPR, show a fluence-dependent increase in the frequency and intensity of the LSPR. The THG-probe experiments show a fluence-dependent decrease of the LSPR-enhanced local electric field intensity within the rod, consistent with a shift of the LSPR to higher frequency. The kinetics from both TA and THG-probe experiments are found to be independent of the fluence of the pump. These results indicate that UV excitation modulates the plasma frequency of ITO on the ultrafast time scale by the injection of electrons into, and their subsequent decay from, the conduction band of the rods. Increases to the electron concentration in the conduction band of ∼13% were achieved in these experiments. Computer simulation and modeling have been used throughout the investigation to guide the design of the experiments and to map the electric field distribution around the rods for interpreting far-field measurement results.
Journal of Coordination Chemistry | 2012
Christopher M. Evans; Laura C. Cass; Kathryn E. Knowles; Daniel B. Tice; Robert P. H. Chang; Emily A. Weiss
This review highlights the developments in synthetic methods for colloidal quantum dots that have expanded the range of achievable sizes, shapes, materials, and surface chemistries over the past 30 years, and how these methods have enabled optimization of properties like photoluminescence quantum yield, monodisperse size distributions, and conductivity in the solid state.
Journal of Chemical Physics | 2011
Weiqiang Mu; Dae Kue Hwang; R. P. H. Chang; Maxim Sukharev; Daniel B. Tice; J. B. Ketterson
We describe surface-enhanced Raman scattering measurements from a benzenethiol monolayer adsorbed on a silver-coated film that is, in turn, deposited on an artificial opal, where the latter is a close-packed three-dimensional dielectric lattice formed from polystyrene spheres. Data for a range of sphere sizes, silver film thicknesses, and laser excitation wavelengths are obtained. Enhancement factors can be in the range of 10(7). To partially explain these large enhancements, we have performed model finite-difference time domain simulations of the position-dependent electric fields generated at the opal surfaces for several experimentally studied laser wavelengths and sphere diameters.
Nature Photonics | 2013
Xugang Guo; Nanjia Zhou; Sylvia J. Lou; Jeremy Smith; Daniel B. Tice; Jonathan W. Hennek; Rocío Ponce Ortiz; Juan T. López Navarrete; Shuyou Li; Joseph Strzalka; Lin X. Chen; Robert P. H. Chang; Antonio Facchetti; Tobin J. Marks
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2012
Eric A. McArthur; Jacqueline M. Godbe; Daniel B. Tice; Emily A. Weiss
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2011
Daniel B. Tice; Matthew T. Frederick; R. P. H. Chang; Emily A. Weiss
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2013
Daniel B. Tice; David J. Weinberg; Nathan Mathew; Robert P. H. Chang; Emily A. Weiss
Physical Review B | 2015
Joseph Sklenar; P. Tucciarone; Daniel B. Tice; R. P. H. Chang; S. J. Lee; Ivan P. Nevirkovets; Olle Heinonen; J. B. Ketterson