Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez
Linköping University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2017
Eleni Stavrinidou; Roger Gabrielsson; K. Peter R. Nilsson; Sandeep Kumar Singh; Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Anton V. Volkov; Magnus P. Jonsson; Andrea Grimoldi; Mathias Elgland; Igor Zozoulenko; Daniel T. Simon; Magnus Berggren
Significance Plants with integrated electronics, e-Plants, have been presented recently. Up to now the devices and circuits have been manufactured in localized regions of the plant due to limited distribution of the organic electronic material. Here we demonstrate the synthesis and application of a conjugated oligomer that can be delivered in every part of the vascular tissue of a plant and cross through the veins into the apoplast of leaves. The oligomer polymerizes in vivo due to the physicochemical environment of the plant. We demonstrate long-range conducting wires and supercapacitors along the stem. Our findings open pathways for autonomous energy systems, distributed electronics, and new e-Plant device concepts manufactured in living plants. Electronic plants, e-Plants, are an organic bioelectronic platform that allows electronic interfacing with plants. Recently we have demonstrated plants with augmented electronic functionality. Using the vascular system and organs of a plant, we manufactured organic electronic devices and circuits in vivo, leveraging the internal structure and physiology of the plant as the template, and an integral part of the devices. However, this electronic functionality was only achieved in localized regions, whereas new electronic materials that could be distributed to every part of the plant would provide versatility in device and circuit fabrication and create possibilities for new device concepts. Here we report the synthesis of such a conjugated oligomer that can be distributed and form longer oligomers and polymer in every part of the xylem vascular tissue of a Rosa floribunda cutting, forming long-range conducting wires. The plant’s structure acts as a physical template, whereas the plant’s biochemical response mechanism acts as the catalyst for polymerization. In addition, the oligomer can cross through the veins and enter the apoplastic space in the leaves. Finally, using the plant’s natural architecture we manufacture supercapacitors along the stem. Our results are preludes to autonomous energy systems integrated within plants and distribute interconnected sensor–actuator systems for plant control and optimization.
Journal of Polymer Science Part B | 2018
Sam Rudd; Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Sandeep Kumar Singh; Zia Ullah Khan; Xavier Crispin; Jens Wenzel Andreasen; Igor Zozoulenko; Drew Evans
ABSTRACT Owing to changes in their chemistry and structure, polymers can be fabricated to demonstrate vastly different electrical conductivities over many orders of magnitude. At the high end of conductivity is the class of conducting polymers, which are ideal candidates for many applications in low‐cost electronics. Here, we report the influence of the nature of the doping anion at high doping levels within the semi‐metallic conducting polymer poly(3,4‐ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) on its electronic transport properties. Hall effect measurements on a variety of PEDOT samples show that the choice of doping anion can lead to an order of magnitude enhancement in the charge carrier mobility > 3 cm2/Vs at conductivities approaching 3000 S/cm under ambient conditions. Grazing Incidence Wide Angle X‐ray Scattering, Density Functional Theory calculations, and Molecular Dynamics simulations indicate that the chosen doping anion modifies the way PEDOT chains stack together. This link between structure and specific anion doping at high doping levels has ramifications for the fabrication of conducting polymer‐based devices.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017
Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Igor Zozoulenko
Morphology of the conducting polymer PEDOT:TOS (poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) doped with molecular tosylate) and its crystallization in aqueous solution were studied using atomistic molecular dynamics simulations. It was found that (a) PEDOT comprises crystallite aggregates consisting of 3-6 π-π stacked chains. The crystallites are linked by interpenetrating π-π stacked chains such that percolative paths in the structure are formed. (b) The size of the crystallites depends on the water content, but the π-π stacking distance is practically independent of the chain length, charge concentration and water content.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2018
Robert Brooke; Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Kosala Wijeratne; Eleni Pavlopoulou; Daniela Galliani; Xianjie Liu; Roudabeh Valiollahi; Igor Zozoulenko; Xavier Crispin
Inorganic transparent conductive oxides have dominated the market as transparent electrodes due to their high conductivity and transparency. Here, we report the fabrication and optimization of the synthesis of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) trifluoromethanesulfonate via vapor phase polymerization for the potential replacement of such inorganic materials. The parameters and conditions of the polymerization were investigated and an electrical conductivity of 3800 S cm−1 and 4500 S cm−1 after acid treatment were obtained while maintaining an absorbance similar to that of commercial indium tin oxide. This increase in electrical conductivity was rationalized experimentally and theoretically to an increase in the oxidation level and a higher order of crystallinity which does not disrupt the π–π stacking of PEDOT chains.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2018
Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Nicolas Rolland; Igor Zozoulenko
Deposition dynamics, crystallization, molecular packing, and electronic mobility of poly(3,4-ethylenedioxythiophene) (PEDOT) thin films are affected by the nature of the substrate. Computational microscopy has been carried out to reveal the morphology-substrate dependence for PEDOT thin films doped with molecular tosylate deposited on different substrates including graphite, Si3N4, silicon, and amorphous SiO2. It is shown that the substrate is instrumental in formation of the lamellar structure. PEDOT films on the ordered substrates (graphite, Si3N4, and silicon) exhibit preferential face-on orientation, with graphite showing the most ordered and pronounced face-on packing. In contrast, PEDOT on amorphous SiO2 exhibits the dominant edge-on orientation, except in the dry state where both packings are equally presented. The role of water and the porosity of the substrate in formation of the edge-on structure on SiO2 is outlined. On the basis of the calculated morphology, the multiscale calculations of the electronic transport and percolative analysis are performed outlining how the character of the substrate affects the electron mobility. It is demonstrated that good crystallinity (PEDOT on graphite substrate) and high content of edge-on (PEDOT on SiO2 substrate) are not enough to achieve the highest electrical in-plane mobility. Instead, the least ordered material with lower degree of the edge-on content (PEDOT on silicon substrate) provides the highest mobility because it exhibits an efficient network of π-π stacked chain extending throughout the entire sample.
Nanoscale | 2017
Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Eleni Pavlopoulou; Eleni Stavrinidou; Roger Gabrielsson; Daniel T. Simon; Magnus Berggren; Igor Zozoulenko
Advanced electronic materials | 2017
Anton V. Volkov; Sandeep Kumar Singh; Eleni Stavrinidou; Roger Gabrielsson; Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Alex Cruce; Weimin Chen; Daniel T. Simon; Magnus Berggren; Igor Zozoulenko
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2017
Maria Seitanidou; Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Theresia Arbring Sjöström; Igor Zozoulenko; Magnus Berggren; Daniel T. Simon
Physical Review Materials | 2018
Nicolas Rolland; Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Riccardo Volpi; Igor Zozoulenko
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2018
Mohsen Modarresi; Juan Felipe Franco-Gonzalez; Igor Zozoulenko