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Dive into the research topics where Kyung Ryang Wee is active.

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Featured researches published by Kyung Ryang Wee.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Stabilization of Ruthenium(II) Polypyridyl Chromophores on Nanoparticle Metal-Oxide Electrodes in Water by Hydrophobic PMMA Overlayers

Kyung Ryang Wee; M. Kyle Brennaman; Leila Alibabaei; Byron H. Farnum; Benjamin D. Sherman; Alexander M. Lapides; Thomas J. Meyer

We describe a poly(methyl methacrylate) (PMMA) dip-coating procedure, which results in surface stabilization of phosphonate and carboxylate derivatives of Ru(II)-polypyridyl complexes surface-bound to mesoporous nanoparticle TiO2 and nanoITO films in aqueous solutions. As shown by contact angle and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) measurements, PMMA oligomers conformally coat the metal-oxide nanoparticles changing the mesoporous films from hydrophilic to hydrophobic. The thickness of the PMMA overlayer on TiO2-Ru(II) can be controlled by changing the wt % of PMMA in the dipcoating solution. There are insignificant perturbations in electrochemical or spectral properties at thicknesses of up to 2.1 nm with the Ru(III/II) couple remaining electrochemically reversible and E1/2 values and current densities nearly unaffected. Surface binding by PMMA overlayers results in stable surface binding even at pH 12 with up to a ∼100-fold enhancement in photostability. As shown by transient absorption measurements, the MLCT excited state(s) of phosphonate derivatized [Ru(bpy)2((4,4-(OH)2PO)2bpy)](2+) undergo efficient injection and back electron transfer with pH independent kinetics characteristic of the local pH in the initial loading solution.


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2016

An aqueous, organic dye derivatized SnO2/TiO2 core/shell photoanode

Kyung Ryang Wee; Benjamin D. Sherman; M. Kyle Brennaman; Matthew V. Sheridan; Animesh Nayak; Leila Alibabaei; Thomas J. Meyer

Visible light driven water splitting in a dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cell (DSPEC) based on a phosphonic acid-derivatized donor–π–acceptor (D–π–A) organic dye (P–A–π–D) is described with the dye anchored to an FTO|SnO2/TiO2 core/shell photoanode in a pH 7 phosphate buffer solution. Transient absorption measurements on FTO|TiO2|–[P–A–π–D] compared to core/shell, FTO|SnO2/TiO2(3 nm)|–[P–A–π–D], reveal that excitation of the dye is rapid and efficient with a decrease in back electron rate by a factor of ∼10 on the core/shell. Upon visible, 1 sun excitation (100 mW cm−2) of FTO|SnO2/TiO2(3 nm)|–[P–A–π–D] in a phosphate buffer at pH 7 with 20 mM added hydroquinone (H2Q), photocurrents of ∼2.5 mA cm−2 are observed which are sustained over >15 min photolysis periods with a current enhancement of ∼30-fold compared to FTO|TiO2|–[P–A–π–D] due to the core/shell effect. On surfaces co-loaded with both –[P–A–π–D] and the known water oxidation catalyst, Ru(bda)(pyP)2 (pyP = pyridin-4-methyl phosphonic acid), maximum photocurrent levels of 1.4 mA cm−2 were observed which decreased over an 10 min interval to 0.1 mA cm−2. O2 was measured by use of a two-electrode, collector–generator sandwich cell and was produced in low faradaic efficiencies with the majority of the oxidative photocurrent due to oxidative decomposition of the dye.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

A Dye-Sensitized Photoelectrochemical Tandem Cell for Light Driven Hydrogen Production from Water

Benjamin D. Sherman; Matthew V. Sheridan; Kyung Ryang Wee; Seth L. Marquard; Degao Wang; Leila Alibabaei; Dennis L. Ashford; Thomas J. Meyer

Tandem junction photoelectrochemical water-splitting devices, whereby two light absorbing electrodes targeting separate portions of the solar spectrum generate the voltage required to convert water to oxygen and hydrogen, enable much higher possible efficiencies than single absorber systems. We report here on the development of a tandem system consisting of a dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical cell (DSPEC) wired in series with a dye-sensitized solar cell (DSC). The DSPEC photoanode incorporates a tris(bipyridine)ruthenium(II)-type chromophore and molecular ruthenium based water oxidation catalyst. The DSPEC was tested with two more-red absorbing DSC variations, one utilizing N719 dye with an I3-/I- redox mediator solution and the other D35 dye with a tris(bipyridine)cobalt ([Co(bpy)3]3+/2+) based mediator. The tandem configuration consisting of the DSPEC and D35/[Co(bpy)3]3+/2+ based DSC gave the best overall performance and demonstrated the production of H2 from H2O with the only energy input from simulated solar illumination.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2016

Phosphonate-Derivatized Porphyrins for Photoelectrochemical Applications

Animesh Nayak; Subhangi Roy; Benjamin D. Sherman; Leila Alibabaei; Alexander M. Lapides; M. Kyle Brennaman; Kyung Ryang Wee; Thomas J. Meyer

A series of phosphonate-derivatized, high redox potential porphyrins with mesityl, pentafluorophenyl, and heptafluoropropyl meso-substituents were synthesized by acid-catalyzed condensation reactions. Ground and excited state redox potentials in the series were varied systematically with the electron-donating or electron-accepting nature of the meso-substitutents. The extent of excitation and injection by porphyrin singlet excited states surface-bound to SnO2/TiO2 core/shell metal oxide nanoparticle films varies with the excited state reduction potential, E°()(P(+)/P*). With the mesityl-substituted porphyrin, high current density and sustained photocurrents are observed at pH 7 with the addition of the electron transfer donor hydroquinone.


Chemistry-an Asian Journal | 2016

Polymer‐Based Ruthenium(II) Polypyridyl Chromophores on TiO2 for Solar Energy Conversion

Gyu Leem; Zachary A. Morseth; Kyung Ryang Wee; Junlin Jiang; M. Kyle Brennaman; John M. Papanikolas; Kirk S. Schanze

A polychromophoric light-harvesting assembly featuring a polystyrene (PS) backbone with ionic carboxylate-functionalized Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes as pendant groups (PS-Ru-A) was synthesized and successfully anchored onto mesoporous structured TiO2 films (TiO2 //PS-Ru-A). Studies of the resulting TiO2 //PS-Ru-A films carried out by transmission electron microscopy (TEM), scanning electron microscopy (SEM), and atomic force microscopy (AFM) confirmed that the ionic carboxylated Ru(II) complexes from PS-Ru-A led to the surface immobilization on the TiO2 film. Monochromatic light photocurrent spectroscopy (IPCE) and white light (AM1.5G) current-voltage studies of dye-sensitized solar cells using the TiO2 //PS-Ru-A photoanode give rise to modest photocurrent and white light efficiency (24u2009% peak IPCE and 0.33u2009% PCE, respectively). The photostability of surface-bound TiO2 //PS-Ru-A films was tested and compared to a monomeric Ru(II) complex (TiO2 //Ru-A), showing an enhancement of ∼14u2009% in the photostability of PS-Ru-A. Transient absorption measurements reveal that electron injection from surface-bound pendants occurs on the picosecond time scale, similar to TiO2 //Ru-A, while time-resolved emission measurements reveal delayed electron injection occurring in TiO2 //PS-Ru-A on the nanosecond time scale, underscoring energy transport from unbound to surface-bound complexes. Additionally, charge recombination is delayed in PS-Ru-A, pointing towards intra-assembly hole transport to complexes away from the surface. Molecular dynamics simulations of PS-Ru-A in fluid solution indicate that a majority of the pendant Ru(II) complexes lie within 10-20u2005Å of each other, facilitating efficient energy- and charge transport among the pendant complexes.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2016

Analysis of Homogeneous Water Oxidation Catalysis with Collector–Generator Cells

Benjamin D. Sherman; Matthew V. Sheridan; Kyung Ryang Wee; Na Song; Christopher J. Dares; Zhen Fang; Yusuke Tamaki; Animesh Nayak; Thomas J. Meyer

A collector-generator (C-G) technique has been applied to determine the Faradaic efficiencies for electrocatalytic O2 production by the homogeneous water oxidation catalysts Ru(bda)(isoq)2 (1; bda = 2,2-bipyridine and isoq = isoquinoline) and [Ru(tpy)(bpz)(OH2)](2+) (2; tpy = 2,2:6,2″-terpyridine and bpz = 2,2-bipyrazine). This technique uses a custom-fabricated cell consisting of two fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO) working electrodes separated by 1 mm with the conductive sides facing each other. With a catalyst in solution, water oxidation occurs at one FTO electrode under a sufficient bias to drive O2 formation by the catalyst; the O2 formed then diffuses to the second FTO electrode poised at a potential sufficiently negative to drive O2 reduction. A comparison of the current versus time response at each electrode enables determination of the Faradaic efficiency for O2 production with high concentrations of supporting electrolyte important for avoiding capacitance effects between the electrodes. The C-G technique was applied to electrocatalytic water oxidation by 1 in the presence of the electron-transfer mediator Ru(bpy)3(2+) in both unbuffered aqueous solutions and with the added buffer bases HCO3(-), HPO4(2-), imidazole, 1-methylimidazole, and 4-methoxypyridine. HCO3(-) and HPO4(2-) facilitate water oxidation by atom-proton transfer (APT), which gave Faradaic yields of 100%. With imidazole as the buffer base, coordination to the catalyst inhibited water oxidation. 1-Methylimidazole and 4-methoxypyridine gave O2 yields of 55% and 76%, respectively, with the lower Faradaic efficiencies possibly due to competitive C-H oxidation of the bases. O2 evolution by catalyst 2 was evaluated at pH 12 with 0.1 M PO4(3-) and at pH 7 in a 0.1 M H2PO4(-)/HPO4(2-) buffer. At pH 12, at an applied potential of 0.8 V vs SCE, water oxidation by the Ru(IV)(O)(2+) form of the catalyst gave O2 in 73% yield. In a pH 7 solution, water oxidation at 1.4 V vs SCE, which is dominated by Ru(V)(O)(3+), gave O2 with an efficiency of 100%. The lower efficiency for Ru(IV)(O)(2+) at pH 12 may be due to competitive oxidation of a polypyridyl ligand.


ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017

Chromophore-Catalyst Assembly for Water Oxidation Prepared by Atomic Layer Deposition

Leila Alibabaei; Robert J. Dillon; Caroline E. Reilly; M. Kyle Brennaman; Kyung Ryang Wee; Seth L. Marquard; John M. Papanikolas; Thomas J. Meyer

Visible-light-driven water splitting was investigated in a dye sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell (DSPEC) based on a photoanode with a phosphonic acid-derivatized donor-π-acceptor (D-π-A) organic chromophore, 1, and the water oxidation catalyst [Ru(bda)(4-O(CH2)3P(O3H2)2-pyr)2], 2, (pyr = pyridine; bda = 2,2-bipyridine-6,6-dicarboxylate). The photoanode was prepared by using a layering strategy beginning with the organic dye anchored to an FTO|core/shell electrode, atomic layer deposition (ALD) of a thin layer (<1 nm) of TiO2, and catalyst binding through phosphonate linkage to the TiO2 layer. Device performance was evaluated by photocurrent measurements for core/shell photoanodes, with either SnO2 or nanoITO core materials, in acetate-buffered, aqueous solutions at pH 4.6 or 5.7. The absolute magnitudes of photocurrent changes with the core material, TiO2 spacer layer thickness, or pH, observed photocurrents were 2.5-fold higher in the presence of catalyst. The results of transient absorption measurements and DFT calculations show that electron injection by the photoexcited organic dye is ultrafast promoted by electronic interactions enabled by orientation of the dyes molecular orbitals on the electrode surface. Rapid injection is followed by recombination with the oxidized dye which is 95% complete by 1.5 ns. Although chromophore decomposition limits the efficiency of the DSPEC devices toward O2 production, the flexibility of the strategy presented here offers a new approach to photoanode design.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2015

Light-Driven Water Splitting with a Molecular Electroassembly-Based Core/Shell Photoanode

Benjamin D. Sherman; Dennis L. Ashford; Alexander M. Lapides; Matthew V. Sheridan; Kyung Ryang Wee; Thomas J. Meyer


ACS Catalysis | 2015

Electron Transfer Mediator Effects in the Oxidative Activation of a Ruthenium Dicarboxylate Water Oxidation Catalyst

Matthew V. Sheridan; Benjamin D. Sherman; Zhen Fang; Kyung Ryang Wee; Michael K. Coggins; Thomas J. Meyer


ACS energy letters | 2016

Evaluation of Chromophore and Assembly Design in Light-Driven Water Splitting with a Molecular Water Oxidation Catalyst

Matthew V. Sheridan; Benjamin D. Sherman; Rodolfo L. Coppo; Degao Wang; Seth L. Marquard; Kyung Ryang Wee; Neyde Yukie Murakami Iha; Thomas J. Meyer

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Thomas J. Meyer

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Benjamin D. Sherman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Matthew V. Sheridan

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Leila Alibabaei

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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M. Kyle Brennaman

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Seth L. Marquard

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Alexander M. Lapides

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Animesh Nayak

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Dennis L. Ashford

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Zhen Fang

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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