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Dive into the research topics where Egle Puodziukynaite is active.

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Featured researches published by Egle Puodziukynaite.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Establishing Dual Electrogenerated Chemiluminescence and Multicolor Electrochromism in Functional Ionic Transition-Metal Complexes

Egle Puodziukynaite; Justin L. Oberst; Aubrey L. Dyer; John R. Reynolds

A combination of electrochromism and electroluminescence in functional materials could lead to single-layer dual electrochromic/electroluminescent (EC/EL) display devices, capable of simultaneous operation in emissive and reflective modes. Whereas such next generation displays could provide optimal visibility in any ambient lighting situation, materials available that exhibit such characteristics in the active layer are limited due to the required intrinsic multifunctionality (i.e., redox activity, electroluminescence, electrochromism, and ion conductivity) and to date can only be achieved via the rational design of ionic transition-metal complexes. Reported herein is the synthesis and characterization of a new family of acrylate-containing ruthenium (tris)bipyridine-based coordination complexes with multifunctional characteristics. Potential use of the presented compounds in EC/EL devices is established, as they are applied as cross-linked electrochromic films and electrochemiluminescent layers in light-emitting electrochemical cell devices. Electrochromic switching of the polymeric networks between yellow, orange, green, brown and transmissive states is demonstrated, and electrochemiluminescent devices based on the complexes synthesized show red-orange to deep red emission with λ(max) ranging from 680 to 722 nm and luminance up to 135 cd/m(2). Additionally, a dual EC/EL device prototype is presented where light emission and multicolor electrochromism occur from the same pixel comprised of a single active layer, demonstrating a true combination of these properties in ionic transition-metal complexes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Azulene Methacrylate Polymers: Synthesis, Electronic Properties, and Solar Cell Fabrication

Egle Puodziukynaite; Hsin-Wei Wang; Jimmy Lawrence; Adam J. Wise; Thomas P. Russell; Michael D. Barnes; Todd Emrick

We report the synthesis of novel azulene-substituted methacrylate polymers by free radical polymerization, in which the azulene moieties represent hydrophobic dipoles strung pendant to the polymer backbone and impart unique electronic properties to the polymers. Tunable optoelectronic properties were realized by adjusting the azulene density, ranging from homopolymers (having one azulene group per repeat unit) to copolymers in which the azulene density was diluted with other pendant groups. Treating these polymers with organic acids revealed optical and excitonic behavior that depended critically on the azulene density along the polymer chain. Copolymers of azulene with zwitterionic methacrylates proved useful as cathode modification layers in bulk-heterojunction solar cells, where the relative azulene content affected the device metrics and the power conversion efficiency reached 7.9%.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015

Poly(sulfobetaine methacrylate)s as Electrode Modifiers for Inverted Organic Electronics

Hyunbok Lee; Egle Puodziukynaite; Yue Zhang; John C. Stephenson; Lee J. Richter; Daniel Fischer; Dean M. DeLongchamp; Todd Emrick; Alejandro L. Briseno

We demonstrate the use of poly(sulfobetaine methacrylate) (PSBMA), and its pyrene-containing copolymer, as solution-processable work function reducers for inverted organic electronic devices. A notable feature of PSBMA is its orthogonal solubility relative to solvents typically employed in the processing of organic semiconductors. A strong permanent dipole moment on the sulfobetaine moiety was calculated by density functional theory. PSBMA interlayers reduced the work function of metals, graphene, and poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS) by over 1 eV, and an ultrathin interlayer of PSBMA reduced the electron injection barrier between indium tin oxide (ITO) and C70 by 0.67 eV. As a result, the performance of organic photovoltaic devices with PSBMA interlayers is significantly improved, and enhanced electron injection is demonstrated in electron-only devices with ITO, PEDOT:PSS, and graphene electrodes. This work makes available a new class of dipole-rich, counterion-free, pH insensitive polymer interlayers with demonstrated effectiveness in inverted devices.


Nano Letters | 2014

Intrinsic and Extrinsic Parameters for Controlling the Growth of Organic Single-Crystalline Nanopillars in Photovoltaics

Yue Zhang; Ying Diao; Hyunbok Lee; Timothy J. Mirabito; Richard W. Johnson; Egle Puodziukynaite; Jacob John; Kenneth R. Carter; Todd Emrick; Stefan C. B. Mannsfeld; Alejandro L. Briseno

The most efficient architecture for achieving high donor/acceptor interfacial area in organic photovoltaics (OPVs) would employ arrays of vertically interdigitated p- and n- type semiconductor nanopillars (NPs). Such morphology could have an advantage in bulk heterojunction systems; however, precise control of the dimension morphology in a crystalline, interpenetrating architecture has not yet been realized. Here we present a simple, yet facile, crystallization technique for the growth of vertically oriented NPs utilizing a modified thermal evaporation technique that hinges on a fast deposition rate, short substrate-source distance, and ballistic mass transport. A broad range of organic semiconductor materials is beneficial from the technique to generate NP geometries. Moreover, this technique can also be generalized to various substrates, namely, graphene, PEDOT-PSS, ZnO, CuI, MoO3, and MoS2. The advantage of the NP architecture over the conventional thin film counterpart is demonstrated with an increase of power conversion efficiency of 32% in photovoltaics. This technique will advance the knowledge of organic semiconductor crystallization and create opportunities for the fabrication and processing of NPs for applications that include solar cells, charge storage devices, sensors, and vertical transistors.


Accounts of Chemical Research | 2015

Ultrafast dynamics in multifunctional Ru(II)-loaded polymers for solar energy conversion.

Zachary A. Morseth; Li Wang; Egle Puodziukynaite; Gyu Leem; Alexander T. Gilligan; Thomas J. Meyer; Kirk S. Schanze; John R. Reynolds; John M. Papanikolas

The use of sunlight to make chemical fuels (i.e., solar fuels) is an attractive approach in the quest to develop sustainable energy sources. Using nature as a guide, assemblies for artificial photosynthesis will need to perform multiple functions. They will need to be able to harvest light across a broad region of the solar spectrum, transport excited-state energy to charge-separation sites, and then transport and store redox equivalents for use in the catalytic reactions that produce chemical fuels. This multifunctional behavior will require the assimilation of multiple components into a single macromolecular system. A wide variety of different architectures including porphyrin arrays, peptides, dendrimers, and polymers have been explored, with each design posing unique challenges. Polymer assemblies are attractive due to their relative ease of production and facile synthetic modification. However, their disordered nature gives rise to stochastic dynamics not present in more ordered assemblies. The rational design of assemblies requires a detailed understanding of the energy and electron transfer events that follow light absorption, which can occur on time scales ranging from femtoseconds to hundreds of microseconds, necessitating the use of sophisticated techniques. We have used a combination of time-resolved absorption and emission spectroscopies with observation times that span 9 orders of magnitude to follow the excited-state evolution within polymer-based molecular assemblies. We complement experimental observations with molecular dynamics simulations to develop a microscopic view of these dynamics. This Account provides an overview of our work on polymers decorated with pendant Ru(II) chromophores, both in solution and on surfaces. We have examined site-to-site energy transport among the Ru(II) complexes, and in systems incorporating π-conjugated polymers, we have observed ultrafast formation of a long-lived charge-separated state. When attached to TiO2, these assemblies exhibit multifunctional behavior in which photon absorption is followed by energy transport to the surface and electron injection to produce an oxidized metal complex. The oxidizing equivalent is then transferred to the conjugated polymer, giving rise to a long-lived charge-separated state.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2012

Competition Between Ultrafast Energy Flow and Electron Transfer in a Ru(II)-Loaded Polyfluorene Light-Harvesting Polymer

Li Wang; Egle Puodziukynaite; Ryan P. Vary; Erik M. Grumstrup; Ryan M. Walczak; Olga Y. Zolotarskaya; Kirk S. Schanze; John R. Reynolds; John M. Papanikolas

This Letter describes the synthesis and photophysical characterization of a Ru(II) assembly consisting of metal polypyridyl complexes linked together by a polyfluorene scaffold. Unlike many scaffolds incorporating saturated linkages, the conjugated polymer in this system acts as a functional light-harvesting component. Conformational disorder breaks the conjugation in the polymer backbone, resulting in a chain composed of many chromophore units, whose relative energies depend on the segment lengths. Photoexcitation of the polyfluorene by a femtosecond laser pulse results in the excitation of polyfluorene, which then undergoes direct energy transfer to the pendant Ru(II) complexes, producing Ru(II)* excited states within 500 fs after photoexcitation. Femtosecond transient absorption data show the presence of electron transfer from PF* to Ru(II) to form charge-separated (CS) products within 1-2 ps. The decay of the oxidized and reduced products, PF(+•) and Ru(I), through back electron transfer are followed using picosecond transient absorption methods.


Polymer Chemistry | 2015

Ru(bpy)32+ derivatized polystyrenes constructed by nitroxide-mediated radical polymerization. Relationship between polymer chain length, structure and photophysical properties

Gyu Leem; Shahar Keinan; Junlin Jiang; Zhuo Chen; Toan Pho; Zachary A. Morseth; Zhenya Hu; Egle Puodziukynaite; Zhen Fang; John M. Papanikolas; John R. Reynolds; Kirk S. Schanze

A series of polystyrene-based light harvesting polymers featuring pendant polypyridyl ruthenium complexes has been synthesized. The polymer backbones were prepared by nitroxide-mediated radical polymerization with a variable average molecular weight (Mn) ranging from ∼5500 to ∼24 000 g mol−1. Pendant Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes were grafted to the polymer backbone by azide–alkyne click chemistry to afford chromophore loaded polymers. The resulting polystyrene-based polychromophores with pendant Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes (PS-Ru) were characterized by nuclear magnetic resonance and infrared spectroscopy, confirming the high efficiency of the click grafting. The photophysical and electrochemical properties of the series of PS-Ru polymers were characterized in solution and investigated as a function of polymer chain length and solvent. The electrochemical properties of PS-Ru maintained the characteristics of the individual Ru(II) polypyridyl units. Emission quantum yield and lifetime studies reveal that the metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) excited states are quenched to a variable extent depending on the molecular weight of the polymers, consistent with intramolecular energy transfer and self-quenching in polymers with longer chain lengths. To support the synthetic effort, molecular dynamics simulations of the polypyridyl ruthenium derivatized polystyrenes in different solvents were conducted.


Advanced Materials Interfaces | 2016

The Structural Origin of Electron Injection Enhancements with Fulleropyrrolidine Interlayers

Hyunbok Lee; John C. Stephenson; Lee J. Richter; Christopher R. McNeill; Eliot Gann; Lars Thomsen; Soohyung Park; Junkyeong Jeong; Yeonjin Yi; Dean M. DeLongchamp; Zachariah A. Page; Egle Puodziukynaite; Todd Emrick; Alejandro L. Briseno

The orientation of the substituent groups in a new class of work function modification layers, based on functionalized fulleropyrrolidines, is measured and found to directly account for the sign of the work function change.


SPIE Organic Photonics + Electronics | 2015

Poly(sulfobetaine methacrylate)s as electrode modifiers for inverted solar cells (Presentation Recording)

Hyunbok Lee; Egle Puodziukynaite; Todd Emrick; Alejandro L. Briseno

We demonstrate the use of polymeric zwitterions, namely, poly(sulfobetaine methacrylate) (PSBMA), as solution-processable work function reducers for inverted organic electronic devices. A notable feature of PSBMA is orthogonal solubility relative to solvents typically employed in the processing of organic semiconductors. A strong permanent dipole moment on the sulfobetaine moiety was calculated by density functional theory. PSBMA interlayers reduced the work function of a broad range of electrodes [indium tin oxide (ITO), Au, Ag, poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene):poly(styrenesulfonate) (PEDOT:PSS), Cu, Al, and even graphene] by over 1 eV. By employing an ultrathin interlayer of PSBMA, one can reduce the electron injection barrier between ITO and C70 by 0.67 eV. As a result, the device performance of OPVs with PSBMA interlayers are significantly improved, and enhanced electron injection is demonstrated in electron-only devices with ITO, PEDOT:PSS and graphene electrodes. This work makes available a new class of dipole-rich, counterion-free, pH insensitive interlayers for use as strong work function reducers for any electrode.


Macromolecules | 2012

Light Harvesting Arrays of Polypyridine Ruthenium(II) Chromophores Prepared by Reversible Addition–Fragmentation Chain Transfer Polymerization

Yali Sun; Zhuo Chen; Egle Puodziukynaite; Dustin M. Jenkins; John R. Reynolds; Kirk S. Schanze

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John R. Reynolds

Georgia Institute of Technology

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Kirk S. Schanze

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Todd Emrick

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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John M. Papanikolas

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Li Wang

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Alejandro L. Briseno

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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Hyunbok Lee

Kangwon National University

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Gyu Leem

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Zachary A. Morseth

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Alexander T. Gilligan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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