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Dive into the research topics where Jacqueline M. Cole is active.

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Featured researches published by Jacqueline M. Cole.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2015

Anchoring Groups for Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells

Lei Zhang; Jacqueline M. Cole

The dyes in dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) require one or more chemical substituents that can act as an anchor, enabling their adsorption onto a metal oxide substrate. This adsorption provides a means for electron injection, which is the process that initiates the electrical circuit in a DSSC. Understanding the structure of various DSSC anchors and the search for new anchors are critical factors for the development of improved DSSCs. Traditionally, carboxylic acid and cyanoacrylic acid groups are employed as dye anchors in DSSCs. In recent years, novel anchor groups have emerged, which make a larger pool of materials available for DSSC dyes, and their associated physical and chemical characteristics offer interesting effects at the interface between dye and metal oxide. This review focuses especially on the structural aspects of these novel dye anchors for TiO2-based DSSCs, including pyridine, phosphonic acid, tetracyanate, perylene dicarboxylic acid anhydride, 2-hydroxylbenzonitrile, 8-hydroxylquinoline, pyridine-N-oxide, hydroxylpyridium, catechol, hydroxamate, sulfonic acid, acetylacetanate, boronic acid, nitro, tetrazole, rhodanine, and salicylic acid substituents. We anticipate that further exploration and understanding of these new types of anchoring groups for TiO2 substrates will not only contribute to the development of advanced DSSCs, but also of quantum dot-sensitized solar cells, water splitting systems, and other self-assembled monolayer-based technologies.


Energy and Environmental Science | 2014

Black silicon: fabrication methods, properties and solar energy applications

Xiaogang Liu; Paul R. Coxon; Marius Peters; Bram Hoex; Jacqueline M. Cole; Derek J. Fray

Black silicon (BSi) represents a very active research area in renewable energy materials. The rise of BSi as a focus of study for its fundamental properties and potentially lucrative practical applications is shown by several recent results ranging from solar cells and light-emitting devices to antibacterial coatings and gas-sensors. In this paper, the common BSi fabrication techniques are first reviewed, including electrochemical HF etching, stain etching, metal-assisted chemical etching, reactive ion etching, laser irradiation and the molten salt Fray-Farthing-Chen-Cambridge (FFC-Cambridge) process. The utilization of BSi as an anti-reflection coating in solar cells is then critically examined and appraised, based upon strategies towards higher efficiency renewable solar energy modules. Methods of incorporating BSi in advanced solar cell architectures and the production of ultra-thin and flexible BSi wafers are also surveyed. Particular attention is given to routes leading to passivated BSi surfaces, which are essential for improving the electrical properties of any devices incorporating BSi, with a special focus on atomic layer deposition of Al2O3. Finally, three potential research directions worth exploring for practical solar cell applications are highlighted, namely, encapsulation effects, the development of micro-nano dual-scale BSi, and the incorporation of BSi into thin solar cells. It is intended that this paper will serve as a useful introduction to this novel material and its properties, and provide a general overview of recent progress in research currently being undertaken for renewable energy applications.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Molecular Origins of Optoelectronic Properties in Coumarin Dyes: Toward Designer Solar Cell and Laser Applications

Xiaogang Liu; Jacqueline M. Cole; Paul G. Waddell; Tze-Chia Lin; Jignesh Radia; Anita Zeidler

Coumarin derivatives are used in a wide range of applications, such as dye-sensitized solar cells (DSCs) and dye lasers, and have therefore attracted considerable research interest. In order to understand the molecular origins of their optoelectronic properties, molecular structures for 29 coumarin laser dyes are statistically analyzed. To this end, data for 25 compounds were taken from the Cambridge Structural Database and compared with data for four new crystal structures of coumarin laser dyes [Coumarin 487 (C(19)H(23)NO(2)), Coumarin 498 (C(16)H(17)NO(4)S), Coumarin 510 (C(20)H(18)N(2)O(2)), and Coumarin 525 (C(22)H(18)N(2)O(3))], which are reported herein. The competing contributions of different resonance states to the bond lengths of the 4- and 7-substituted coumarin laser dyes are computed based on the harmonic oscillator stabilization energy model. Consequently, a positive correlation between the contribution of the para-quinoidal resonance state and the UV-vis peak absorption wavelength of these coumarins is revealed. Furthermore, the perturbations of optoelectronic properties, owing to chemical substituents in these coumarin laser dyes, are analyzed: it is found that their UV-vis peak absorption and lasing wavelengths experience a red shift, as the electron-donating strength of the 7-position substituent increases and/or the electron-withdrawing strength of the 3- or 4-position substituent rises; this conclusion is corroborated by quantum-chemical calculations. It is also revealed that the closer the relevant substituents align with the direction of the intramolecular charge transfer (ICT), the larger the spectral shifts and the higher the molar extinction coefficients of coumarin laser dyes. These findings are important for understanding the ICT mechanism in coumarins. Meanwhile, all structure-property correlations revealed herein will enable knowledge-based molecular design of coumarins for dye lasers and DSC applications.


Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2001

An x-ray diffraction and 31P MAS NMR study of rare-earth phosphate glasses, (R2O3)x(P2O5)1-x, x = 0.175-0.263, R = La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, Er

Jacqueline M. Cole; Ernst R H van Eck; Gavin Mountjoy; Ruth Anderson; Tessa Brennan; Graham Bushnell-Wye; Robert J. Newport; G. A. Saunders

An x-ray diffraction and 31P MAS NMR study of rare-earth phosphate glasses of composition, (R2O3)xP2O5)1-x, where x = 0.175-0.263 and R = La-Er (except for Pm), is presented. The structures of these materials were investigated as a function of (a) rare-earth atomic number and (b) glass composition. The results show an increase in rare-earth coordination number from six to seven as the rare-earth ion increases in size. This effect is most evident for the rare earths, Ce, Pr and Nd, and appears to be independent of composition variation. The implications of sevenfold coordination in these glasses with respect to the possibilities of rare-earth clustering are discussed, as is the role of the incorporation of aluminium impurities in this regard. The increase in levels of cross-linking within the phosphate network, as a consequence of these small amounts of aluminium, is illustrated, as is the changing nature of the phosphate groups as a function of composition. The first reliable and quantitative parametrization of the second and third neighbour R-(O)-P and R-(OP)-O correlations is also given and the stability of the structures to strain when the glasses are drawn as fibres or exposed to different thermal conditions is described.


Chemical Society Reviews | 2004

Single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies of photo-induced molecular species

Jacqueline M. Cole

This tutorial review gathers together the recent developments in single-crystal X-ray diffraction that are starting to enable one to quantify directly the nature of light-induced electronic perturbations in chemical structures. Such structural information is key to understanding many photo-activated chemical processes and physical properties, and a description of the scientific impetus behind this incipient area of structural science, from academic and industrial perspectives, is given. Photoisomerism processes, solid-state photochemical reactions and spin-cross-over magnetic transitions, that have long-lived or irreversible light-induced states, are best understood by unravelling their three-dimensional structures measured in situ in their photo-converted state. A review of steady-state laser-induced single-crystal X-ray diffraction studies conducted, to date, and the experimental methodologies used in order to realise such structures, is presented. The structural characterisation of more transient photo-induced species (down to picosecond lifetimes) is paramount to a better understanding of the materials that undergo high-speed electronic switching, which make operative much of the electronics and optics industry, since there exists an inherent relationship between the excited-state structure and the physical properties exhibited. Prime examples include excited-state structures of molecular conductors and luminescent materials with potential applications as molecular wires, light-emitting diodes, non-linear optics, triboluminescence and electroluminescence. Previously, only indirect and qualitative interpretations of the nature of these excited-states could be formulated via spectroscopic techniques, but the developments in ms-ps time-resolved laser pump, X-ray probe single-crystal diffraction techniques, described herein, are overcoming this barrier, affording results that are entirely quantitative via a three-dimensional structural representation. In this regard, a review of structures of transient species studied to date is presented along with a discussion of the key experimental parameters that are required for a successful experiment, in terms of the X-ray, laser and sample characteristics. The importance of auxiliary spectroscopic work and complementary theoretical calculations is also briefly discussed. The paper concludes with a future outlook on new possible X-ray sources that will facilitate such work and extend it to structural studies on even more ephemeral species in the future.


Scientific Reports | 2013

Quantum confinement-induced tunable exciton states in graphene oxide.

Dongwook Lee; Jiwon Seo; Xi Zhu; Jiyoul Lee; Hyeon-Jin Shin; Jacqueline M. Cole; Taeho Shin; Jaichan Lee; Hangil Lee; Haibin Su

Graphene oxide has recently been considered to be a potential replacement for cadmium-based quantum dots due to its expected high fluorescence. Although previously reported, the origin of the luminescence in graphene oxide is still controversial. Here, we report the presence of core/valence excitons in graphene-based materials, a basic ingredient for optical devices, induced by quantum confinement. Electron confinement in the unreacted graphitic regions of graphene oxide was probed by high resolution X-ray absorption near edge structure spectroscopy and first-principles calculations. Using experiments and simulations, we were able to tune the core/valence exciton energy by manipulating the size of graphitic regions through the degree of oxidation. The binding energy of an exciton in highly oxidized graphene oxide is similar to that in organic electroluminescent materials. These results open the possibility of graphene oxide-based optoelectronic device technology.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Photoconversion bonding mechanism in ruthenium sulfur dioxide linkage photoisomers revealed by in situ diffraction.

Sven O. Sylvester; Jacqueline M. Cole; Paul G. Waddell

Three new ruthenium-sulfur dioxide linkage photoisomeric complexes in the [Ru(NH(3))(4)(SO(2))X]Cl(2)·H(2)O family (X = pyridine (1); 3-chloropyridine (2); 4-chloropyridine (3)) have been developed in order to examine the effects of the trans-ligand on the nature of the photo-induced SO(2) coordination to the ruthenium ion. Solid-state metastable η(1)-O-bound (MS1) and η(2)-side S,O-bound (MS2) photoisomers are crystallographically resolved by probing a light-induced crystal with in situ diffraction. This so-called photocrystallography reveals the highest known photoconversion fraction of 58(3)% (in 1) for any solid-state SO(2) linkage photoisomer. The decay of this MS1 into the MS2 state was modeled via first-order kinetics with a non-zero asymptote. Furthermore, the MS2 decay kinetics of the three compounds were examined according to their systematically varying trans-ligand X; this offers the first experimental evidence that the MS2 state is primarily stabilized by donation from the S-O(bound) electrons into the Ru dσ-orbital rather than π-backbonding as previously envisaged. This has important consequences for the optoelectronic application of these materials since this establishes, for the first time, a design protocol that will enable one to control their photoconversion levels.


Journal of Materials Research | 1999

An extended x-ray absorption fine structure study of rare-earth phosphate glasses near the metaphosphate composition

Ruth Anderson; Tessa Brennan; Jacqueline M. Cole; Gavin Mountjoy; David M. Pickup; Robert J. Newport; G. A. Saunders

A variable-temperature (79, 145, and 293 K) extended x-ray absorption fine structure study, using rare-earth L-III absorption edges, is reported for phosphate glasses doped with rare-earth elements (R, where R = La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm, Eu, Gd, Tb, Dy, Ho, and Er) with compositions close to metaphosphate, R(PO3)(3). The results yield nearest-neighbor R-O distances that demonstrate the lanthanide contraction in a glassy matrix and an R-O coordination intermediate between 6 and 7 for ran-earth ions with smaller atomic number (Z) and 6 for rare-earth ions with larger Z, Thermal parameters show no significant changes in R-O distances or coordination numbers between 293 and 79 K. There is evidence of an R-P correlation between 3.3 and 3.6 Angstrom and the beginning of a second R-O correlation at approximately 4 Angstrom. No R-R correlations up to a distance of approximately 4 ii were observed.


Acta Crystallographica Section B-structural Science | 2008

Conformational variability of molecules in different crystal environments: a database study.

Ze F. Weng; W. D. Sam Motherwell; Frank H. Allen; Jacqueline M. Cole

A methodology is described for analysing the Cambridge Structural Database (CSD) in terms of molecular conformations. Molecular species that have more than a single occurrence across the complete CSD are identified, either as the sole crystal component or co-crystallized with other components. Cluster analysis, based on a root-mean-square fit of coordinates and chemical connectivity, is performed to identify conformational variance for each molecule. Results are analysed in terms of the number of discrete conformations observed versus the number of crystal environments and number of acyclic torsion angles in the molecule. Special subsets of environments are also analysed, namely polymorphs, co-crystals and solvates. In general, conformational diversity increases with an increasing number of different crystal environments and with an increasing number of flexible torsion angles. Overall, molecules with one or more acyclic flexible torsion angle are observed to exist in more than one conformation in ca 40% of cases. There is evidence that solvated molecules exhibit more conformational flexibility on average, compared with polymorphs and co-crystals.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2012

Ru-OSO coordination photogenerated at 100 K in tetraammineaqua(sulfur dioxide)ruthenium(II) (±)-camphorsulfonate.

Anthony E. Phillips; Jacqueline M. Cole; Thierry d’Almeida; Kian Sing Low

The photoinduced O-bound coordination mode in RuSO(2) complexes, previously observed only at 13 K, has been generated at 100 K in tetraammineaqua(sulfur dioxide)ruthenium(II) (±)-camphorsulfonate. This coordination state, often denoted MS1, decays to the η(2)-bound MS2 state, with an estimated half-life of 3.4(8) h and a long-lived population of 2.9(4)% at 120 K.

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Garry J. McIntyre

Australian Nuclear Science and Technology Organisation

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Tze-Chia Lin

University of Cambridge

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