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Dive into the research topics where Kevin A. Click is active.

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Featured researches published by Kevin A. Click.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Dimeric [Mo2S12]2− Cluster: A Molecular Analogue of MoS2 Edges for Superior Hydrogen‐Evolution Electrocatalysis

Zhongjie Huang; Wenjia Luo; Lu Ma; Mingzhe Yu; Xiaodi Ren; Mingfu He; Shane M. Polen; Kevin A. Click; Benjamin R. Garrett; Jun Lu; Khalil Amine; Christopher M. Hadad; Weilin Chen; Aravind Asthagiri; Yiying Wu

Proton reduction is one of the most fundamental and important reactions in nature. MoS2 edges have been identified as the active sites for hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) electrocatalysis. Designing molecular mimics of MoS2 edge sites is an attractive strategy to understand the underlying catalytic mechanism of different edge sites and improve their activities. Herein we report a dimeric molecular analogue [Mo2 S12 ](2-) , as the smallest unit possessing both the terminal and bridging disulfide ligands. Our electrochemical tests show that [Mo2 S12 ](2-) is a superior heterogeneous HER catalyst under acidic conditions. Computations suggest that the bridging disulfide ligand of [Mo2 S12 ](2-) exhibits a hydrogen adsorption free energy near zero (-0.05 eV). This work helps shed light on the rational design of HER catalysts and biomimetics of hydrogen-evolving enzymes.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Membrane-Inspired Acidically Stable Dye-Sensitized Photocathode for Solar Fuel Production

Kevin A. Click; Damian R. Beauchamp; Zhongjie Huang; Weilin Chen; Yiying Wu

Tandem dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cells (DSPECs) for water splitting are a promising method for sustainable energy conversion but so far have been limited by their lack of aqueous stability and photocurrent mismatch between the cathode and anode. In nature, membrane-enabled subcellular compartmentation is a general approach to control local chemical environments in the cell. The hydrophobic tails of the lipid make the bilayer impermeable to ions and hydrophilic molecules. Herein we report the use of an organic donor-acceptor dye that prevents both dye desorption and semiconductor degradation by mimicking the hydrophobic/hydrophilic properties of lipid bilayer membranes. The dual-functional photosensitizer (denoted as BH4) allows for efficient light harvesting while also protecting the semiconductor surface from protons and water via its hydrophobic π linker. The protection afforded by this membrane-mimicking dye gives this system excellent stability in extremely acidic (pH 0) conditions. The acidic stability also allows for the use of cubane molybdenum-sulfide cluster as the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) catalyst. This system produces a proton-reducing current of 183 ± 36 μA/cm(2) (0 V vs NHE with 300 W Xe lamp) for an unprecedented 16 h with no degradation. These results introduce a method for developing high-current, low-pH DSPECs and are a significant move toward practical dye-sensitized solar fuel production.


Angewandte Chemie | 2015

Dye-controlled interfacial electron transfer for high-current indium tin oxide photocathodes.

Zhongjie Huang; Mingfu He; Mingzhe Yu; Kevin A. Click; Damian R. Beauchamp; Yiying Wu

Efficient sensitized photocathodes are highly desired for solar fuels and tandem solar cells, yet the development is hindered by the scarcity of suitable p-type semiconductors. The generation of high cathodic photocurrents by sensitizing a degenerate n-type semiconductor (tin-doped indium oxide; ITO) is reported. The sensitized mesoporous ITO electrodes deliver cathodic photocurrents of up to 5.96±0.19 mA cm(-2), which are close to the highest record in conventional p-type sensitized photocathodes. This is realized by the rational selection of dyes with appropriate energy alignments with ITO. The energy level alignment between the highest occupied molecular orbital of the sensitizer and the conduction band of ITO is crucial for efficient hole injection. Transient absorption spectroscopy studies demonstrate that the cathodic photocurrent results from reduction of the photoexcited sensitizer by free electrons in ITO. Our results reveal a new perspective toward the selection of electrode materials for sensitized photocathodes.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2016

Tunable Molecular MoS2 Edge-Site Mimics for Catalytic Hydrogen Production

Benjamin R. Garrett; Shane M. Polen; Kevin A. Click; Mingfu He; Zhongjie Huang; Christopher M. Hadad; Yiying Wu

Molybdenum sulfides represent state-of-the-art, non-platinum electrocatalysts for the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER). According to the Sabatier principle, the hydrogen binding strength to the edge active sites should be neither too strong nor too weak. Therefore, it is of interest to develop a molecular motif that mimics the catalytic sites structurally and possesses tunable electronic properties that influence the hydrogen binding strength. Furthermore, molecular mimics will be important for providing mechanistic insight toward the HER with molybdenum sulfide catalysts. In this work, a modular method to tune the catalytic properties of the S-S bond in MoO(S2)2L2 complexes is described. We studied the homogeneous electrocatalytic hydrogen production performance metrics of three catalysts with different bipyridine substitutions. By varying the electron-donating abilities, we present the first demonstration of using the ligand to tune the catalytic properties of the S-S bond in molecular MoS2 edge-site mimics. This work can shed light on the relationship between the structure and electrocatalytic activity of molecular MoS2 catalysts and thus is of broad importance from catalytic hydrogen production to biological enzyme functions.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

[MoO(S2)2L]1– (L = picolinate or pyrimidine-2-carboxylate) Complexes as MoSx-Inspired Electrocatalysts for Hydrogen Production in Aqueous Solution

Benjamin R. Garrett; Kevin A. Click; Christopher B. Durr; Christopher M. Hadad; Yiying Wu

Crystalline and amorphous molybdenum sulfide (Mo-S) catalysts are leaders as earth-abundant materials for electrocatalytic hydrogen production. The development of a molecular motif inspired by the Mo-S catalytic materials and their active sites is of interest, as molecular species possess a great degree of tunable electronic properties. Furthermore, these molecular mimics may be important for providing mechanistic insights toward the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) with Mo-S electrocatalysts. Herein is presented two water-soluble Mo-S complexes based around the [MoO(S2)2L2]1- motif. We present 1H NMR spectra that reveal (NEt4)[MoO(S2)2picolinate] (Mo-pic) is stable in a d6-DMSO solution after heating at 100 °C, in air, revealing unprecedented thermal and aerobic stability of the homogeneous electrocatalyst. Both Mo-pic and (NEt4)[MoO(S2)2pyrimidine-2-carboxylate] (Mo-pym) are shown to be homogeneous electrocatalysts for the HER. The TOF of 27-34 s-1 and 42-48 s-1 for Mo-pic and Mo-pym and onset potentials of 240 mV and 175 mV for Mo-pic and Mo-pym, respectively, reveal these complexes as promising electrocatalysts for the HER.


Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2014

A double-acceptor as a superior organic dye design for p-type DSSCs: high photocurrents and the observed light soaking effect

Kevin A. Click; Damian R. Beauchamp; Benjamin R. Garrett; Zhongjie Huang; Christopher M. Hadad; Yiying Wu


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017

Bilayer Dye Protected Aqueous Photocathodes for Tandem Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells

Kevin A. Click; Bradley M. Schockman; Justin T. Dilenschneider; William D. McCulloch; Benjamin R. Garrett; Yongze Yu; Mingfu He; Allison E. Curtze; Yiying Wu


Cellulose | 2014

Influence of ionic-liquid incubation temperature on changes in cellulose structure, biomass composition, and enzymatic digestibility

Christopher J. Barr; B. Leif Hanson; Kevin A. Click; Grace Perrotta; Constance A. Schall


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017

Electron Transfer Kinetics of a Series of Bilayer Triphenylamine–Oligothiophene–Perylenemonoimide Sensitizers for Dye-Sensitized NiO

Yongze Yu; Kevin A. Click; Shane M. Polen; Mingfu He; Christopher M. Hadad; Yiying Wu


Polyhedron | 2016

Dimeric FeFe-hydrogenase mimics bearing carboxylic acids: Synthesis and electrochemical investigation

Benjamin R. Garrett; Amneh Awad; Mingfu He; Kevin A. Click; Christopher B. Durr; Judith C. Gallucci; Christopher M. Hadad; Yiying Wu

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Yiying Wu

Ohio State University

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Mingfu He

Ohio State University

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Yongze Yu

Ohio State University

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