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Dive into the research topics where Felix N. Castellano is active.

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Featured researches published by Felix N. Castellano.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Boron Dipyrromethene Chromophores: Next Generation Triplet Acceptors/Annihilators for Low Power Upconversion Schemes

Tanya N. Singh-Rachford; Alexandre Haefele; Raymond Ziessel; Felix N. Castellano

In the present study, the red-light absorbing platinum(II) tetraphenyltetrabenzoporphyrin (PtTPBP) was used as a triplet sensitizer in conjunction with two distinct iodophenyl-bearing BODIPY derivatives independently serving as triplet acceptors/annihilators poised for photon upconversion based on triplet-triplet annihilation. In deaerated benzene solutions, extremely stable and high quantum efficiency green (Phi(UC) = 0.0313 +/- 0.0005) and yellow (Phi(UC) = 0.0753 +/- 0.0036) upconverted emissions were observed from selective red excitation of the PtTPBP sensitizer at 635 +/- 5 nm. The current systems represent the first examples of photon upconversion where aromatic hydrocarbons do not serve the role of triplet acceptor/annihilator. Notably, the nature of the current chromophore compositions permitted highly reproducible upconversion quantum efficiency determinations while permitting the evaluation of the triplet-triplet annihilation quantum yields in both instances.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Influence of Temperature on Low-Power Upconversion in Rubbery Polymer Blends

Tanya N. Singh-Rachford; Joseph Lott; Christoph Weder; Felix N. Castellano

The upconverting properties of a dye cocktail composed of palladium(II) octaethylporphyrin (PdOEP, triplet sensitizer) and 9,10-diphenylanthracene (DPA, triplet acceptor/annihilator) were investigated as a function of temperature in several low glass transition temperature (T(g)) polymer hosts including an ethyleneoxide-epichlorohydrin copolymer (EO-EPI) and the polyurethanes Texin 270, Texin 285, and Tecoflex EG-80A. Selective excitation of PdOEP at 544 nm in the presence of DPA in these materials resulted in anti-Stokes blue emission from DPA, a consequence of sensitized triplet-triplet annihilation (TTA) photochemistry, confirmed by the quadratic dependence of the upconverted fluorescence intensity with respect to incident light power. The upconversion process was completely suppressed by cooling a PdOEP/DPA blend film to below the T(g) of the respective polymer. However, the blue emission was clearly visible by the naked eye upon heating these films to room temperature (290 K). Subsequently, the upconverted emission intensity increased with increasing temperature and was found to be completely reversible upon several heating and cooling cycles provided the temperature remained below 400 K. Heating samples above this temperature resulted in unrecoverable failure of the material to produce upconverted photons. The phosphorescence intensity decay of PdOEP in the polymer host, Tecoflex EG-80A, adequately fits to a sum of two exponential functions as well as the Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts (KWW) stretched exponential model. Increasing the temperature of the film increases the complexity and heterogeneity of the system as evidenced by the lower beta values obtained from the KWW model as the temperature increases.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2011

Homogeneous Photocatalytic Hydrogen Production Using π-Conjugated Platinum(II) Arylacetylide Sensitizers

Xianghuai Wang; Sébastien Goeb; Zhiqiang Ji; Nadezhda A. Pogulaichenko; Felix N. Castellano

Three platinum(II) terpyridylacetylide charge-transfer complexes possessing a lone ancillary ligand systematically varied in phenylacetylide π-conjugation length, [Pt((t)Bu(3)tpy)([C≡CC(6)H(4)](n)H)]ClO(4) (n = 1-3), are evaluated as photosensitizers (PSs) for visible-light-driven (λ > 420 nm) hydrogen production in the presence of a cobaloxime catalyst and the sacrificial electron donor triethanolamine (TEOA). Excited-state reductive quenching of the PS by TEOA produces PS(-) (k(q) scales with the driving force as 1 > 2 > 3), enabling thermal electron transfer to the cobalt catalyst. The initial H(2) evolution is directly proportional to the incident photon flux and visible-light harvesting capacity of the sensitizer, 3 > 2 > 1. The combined data suggest that PSs exhibiting attenuated bimolecular reductive quenching constants with respect to the diffusion limit can overcome this deficiency through improved light absorption in homogeneous H(2)-evolving compositions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008

Visible-Light Induced Water Detoxification Catalyzed by PtII Dye Sensitized Titania

Wei Zhao; Yali Sun; Felix N. Castellano

A new dye sensitization system incorporating Pt(dcbpy)Cl2 on Degussa P-25 TiO2 for the photomineralization of aqueous organic pollutants under visible light irradiation is described. The representative wastewater pollutant, 4-chlorophenol (4-CP), is readily oxidized (ultimately to CO2) when the PtII dye sensitized TiO2 is exposed to visible light in the presence of dissolved O2, and the reaction is accelerated when the solution is purged with O2 gas at 1 atm. The sensitizer is regenerated during the photocatalysis; therefore, 4-CP effectively reduces the oxidized form of the surface bound dye. The experimental data are consistent with parallel oxidative decomposition pathways for 4-CP, one which operates using conduction band electrons to produce hydroxyl radicals and another where the oxidized sensitizer irreversibly oxidizes 4-CP.


Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 1998

Electron and energy transfer from CuI MLCT excited states

Mark Ruthkosky; Craig A. Kelly; Felix N. Castellano; Gerald J. Meyer

Abstract Electron and energy transfer processes from CuI MLCT excited states are reviewed. New results demonstrate clearly that these excited states undergo oxidative electron transfer quenching and energy transfer processes. The yields and dynamics of these processes have been spectroscopically quantified. Interfacial electron transfer from CuI MLCT excited states to wide band gap semiconductors has been observed. When utilized in photoelectrochemical cells, this interfacial electron transfer process provides a means for the conversion of light directly into electrical power.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2014

Photochemical Upconversion: The Primacy of Kinetics

Timothy W. Schmidt; Felix N. Castellano

Incoherent photochemical upconversion is a process by which low-energy light can be converted into a higher-energy form with promising applications in solar energy conversion and storage, photocatalysis, biological imaging, and photochemical drug activation. Despite intensive research in recent years, there remains an underappreciation of the chemical kinetics that controls the efficiency of the upconversion process. Here, we provide a brief overview of research into photochemical upconversion and provide a tutorial to guide the design of efficient upconversion compositions. We further provide our perspective on where this area of research is heading and how very efficient systems will be developed.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2008

Pd(II) Phthalocyanine-Sensitized Triplet-Triplet Annihilation from Rubrene

Tanya N. Singh-Rachford; Felix N. Castellano

Upconverted yellow singlet fluorescence from rubrene (5,6,11,12-tetraphenylnapthacene) was generated from selective excitation (lambdaex = 725 nm) of the red light absorbing triplet sensitizer palladium(II) octabutoxyphthalocyanine, PdPc(OBu)8, in vacuum degassed toluene solutions using a Nd:YAG/OPO laser system in concert with gated iCCD detection. The data are consistent with upconversion proceeding from triplet-triplet annihilation (TTA) of rubrene acceptor molecules. The TTA process was confirmed by the quadratic dependence of the upconverted delayed fluorescence intensity with respect to incident light, measured by integrating the corresponding kinetic traces as a function of the incident excitation power. In vacuum degassed toluene solutions, the red-to-yellow upconversion process is stable under continuous long wavelength irradiation and is readily visualized by the naked eye even at modest laser fluence (0.6 mJ/pulse). In aerated solutions, however, selective excitation of the phthalocyanine sensitizer leads to rapid decomposition of rubrene into its corresponding endoperoxide as evidenced by UV-vis (in toluene), 1H NMR (in d6-benzene), and MALDI-TOF mass spectrometry, consistent with the established reactivity of rubrene with singlet dioxygen. The upconversion process in this triplet sensitizer/acceptor-annihilator combination was preliminarily investigated in solid polymer films composed of a 50:50 mixture of an ethyleneoxide/epichlorohydrin copolymer, P(EO/EP). Films that were prepared under an argon atmosphere and maintained under this inert environment successfully achieve the anticipated quadratic incident power dependence, whereas air exposure causes the film to deviate somewhat from this dependence. To the best of our knowledge, the current study represents the first example of photon upconversion using a phthalocyanine triplet sensitizer, furthering the notion that anti-Stokes light-producing sensitized TTA appears to be a general phenomenon as long as proper energy criteria are met.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2014

Towards a comprehensive understanding of visible-light photogeneration of hydrogen from water using cobalt(II) polypyridyl catalysts

Rony S. Khnayzer; V. S. Thoi; Michael Nippe; Amanda E. King; Jonah W. Jurss; K. A. El Roz; Jeffrey R. Long; Christopher J. Chang; Felix N. Castellano

Homogeneous aqueous solutions of photocatalytic ensembles, consisting of [Ru(bpy)3]2+ as a photosensitizer, ascorbic acid/ascorbate as the electron source, and 10 distinct Co2+-based molecular catalysts, were evaluated for visible-light induced hydrogen evolution using high-throughput screening. The combined results demonstrate that Co2+ complexes bearing tetradentate ligands yield more active photocatalytic compositions than their congeners with pentadentate ligands while operating with high catalyst stability. Additionally, molecular Co2+ catalysts with cis open coordination sites appear to be significantly more active for hydrogen evolution than those with trans open sites. As evidenced by mass spectrometric analysis of the reactor headspace and associated deuteration experiments, the H2 gas generated in all instances was derived from aqueous protons. One of the most promising cis-disposed Co2+ species, [Co(bpyPY2Me)(CH3CN)(CF3SO3)](CF3SO3) (1), engages in highly efficient hydrogen evolving photocatalysis, achieving a turnover number of 4200 (H2/Co) and a turnover frequency of 3200 (H2/Co per h) at pH 4 under simulated sunlight (AM 1.5G, 100 mW cm−2) at room temperature. At equimolar concentrations of photosensitizer and 1, the total hydrogen produced appears to be exclusively limited by the photostability of [Ru(bpy)3]2+, which was observed to decompose into an Ru(bpy)2–ascorbate adduct, as evidenced by HPLC and ESI-MS experiments. Lowering the operating temperature from 27 to 5 °C significantly attenuates bpy dissociation from the sensitizer, resulting in a net ∼two-fold increase in hydrogen production from this composition. The primary electron transfer steps of this photocatalytic ensemble were investigated by nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Photoexcited [Ru(bpy)3]2+ undergoes reductive quenching by ascorbic acid/ascorbate (kq = 2.6 × 107 M−1 s−1), releasing [Ru(bpy)3]+ from the encounter solvent cage with an efficiency of 55 ± 5%. In the presence of catalyst 1, [Ru(bpy)3]+ generated in the initial flash-quench experiment transfers an electron (ket = 2 × 109 M−1 s−1) at an efficiency of 85 ± 10% to the catalyst, which is believed to enter the hydrogen evolution cycle subsequently. Using a combinatorial approach, all ten Co2+ catalysts were evaluated for their potential to operate under neutral pH 7.0 conditions. Catalyst 7, [Co(PY4MeH2)(CH3CN)(CF3SO3)](CF3SO3), was revealed to be most promising, as its performance metrics were only marginally affected by pH and turnover numbers greater than 1000 were easily obtained in photocatalytic hydrogen generation. These comprehensive findings provide guidelines for the development of molecular compositions capable of evolving hydrogen from purely aqueous media.


Science | 2016

Direct observation of triplet energy transfer from semiconductor nanocrystals.

Cédric Mongin; Sofia Garakyaraghi; Natalia Razgoniaeva; Mikhail Zamkov; Felix N. Castellano

A different way to put triplets in play Most molecules adopt a singlet spin configuration: All their electrons are arranged in pairs. Unpaired triplet states engage in a variety of useful reactions but are hard to produce. Quantum mechanics dictates that photo-excitation from singlet to triplet states is inefficient. Instead, chemists rely on sensitizers, which populate the triplet states of their neighbors through energy transfer after absorbing light themselves. Mongin et al. now show that certain nanoparticles can act as triplet sensitizers. Science, this issue p. 369 Nanoparticles can channel photoexcitation to surface molecules to instigate spin-state–dependent chemistry in solution. Triplet excitons are pervasive in both organic and inorganic semiconductors but generally remain confined to the material in which they originate. We demonstrated by transient absorption spectroscopy that cadmium selenide semiconductor nanoparticles, selectively excited by green light, engage in interfacial Dexter-like triplet-triplet energy transfer with surface-anchored polyaromatic carboxylic acid acceptors, extending the excited-state lifetime by six orders of magnitude. Net triplet energy transfer also occurs from surface acceptors to freely diffusing molecular solutes, further extending the lifetime while sensitizing singlet oxygen in an aerated solution. The successful translation of triplet excitons from semiconductor nanoparticles to the bulk solution implies that such materials are generally effective surrogates for molecular triplets. The nanoparticles could thereby potentially sensitize a range of chemical transformations that are relevant for fields as diverse as optoelectronics, solar energy conversion, and photobiology.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013

Robust Cuprous Phenanthroline Sensitizer for Solar Hydrogen Photocatalysis

Rony S. Khnayzer; Catherine E. McCusker; Babatunde S. Olaiya; Felix N. Castellano

The Cu(I) metal-to-ligand charge-transfer complex, [Cu(dsbtmp)2](+) (dsbtmp = 2,9-di(sec-butyl)-3,4,7,8-tetramethyl-1,10-phenanthroline), exhibits outstanding stability as a visible-light-absorbing photosensitizer in hydrogen-evolving homogeneous photocatalysis. In concert with the Co(dmgH)2(py)Cl water reduction catalyst and N,N-dimethyl-p-toluidine sacrificial donor in 1:1 H2O:CH3CN, this Cu(I) sensitizer remains active even after 5 days of visible-light-pumped (λex = 452 ± 10 nm) hydrogen evolution catalysis. Deuteration studies illustrate that the hydrogen produced from this composition does indeed originate from aqueous protons.

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Dive into the Felix N. Castellano's collaboration.

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Catherine E. McCusker

North Carolina State University

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Gerald J. Meyer

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Raymond Ziessel

École Normale Supérieure

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Aaron A. Rachford

Bowling Green State University

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Daniel S. Tyson

Bowling Green State University

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Mykhaylo Myahkostupov

North Carolina State University

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Sofia Garakyaraghi

North Carolina State University

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Tanya N. Singh-Rachford

Bowling Green State University

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Rony S. Khnayzer

Lebanese American University

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