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Dive into the research topics where Leila Alibabaei is active.

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Featured researches published by Leila Alibabaei.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Solar water splitting in a molecular photoelectrochemical cell.

Leila Alibabaei; M. Kyle Brennaman; Michael R. Norris; Berç Kalanyan; Wenjing Song; Mark D. Losego; Javier J. Concepcion; Robert A. Binstead; Gregory N. Parsons; Thomas J. Meyer

Significance Solar water splitting into H2 and O2 with visible light has been achieved by a molecular assembly. The dye sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell configuration combined with core–shell structures with a thin layer of TiO2 on transparent, nanostructured transparent conducting oxides (TCO), with the outer TiO2 shell formed by atomic layer deposition. In this configuration, excitation and injection occur rapidly and efficiently with the injected electrons collected by the nanostructured TCO on the nanosecond timescale where they are collected by the planar conductive electrode and transmitted to the cathode for H2 production. This allows multiple oxidative equivalents to accumulate at a remote catalyst where water oxidation catalysis occurs. Artificial photosynthesis and the production of solar fuels could be a key element in a future renewable energy economy providing a solution to the energy storage problem in solar energy conversion. We describe a hybrid strategy for solar water splitting based on a dye sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell. It uses a derivatized, core–shell nanostructured photoanode with the core a high surface area conductive metal oxide film––indium tin oxide or antimony tin oxide––coated with a thin outer shell of TiO2 formed by atomic layer deposition. A “chromophore–catalyst assembly” 1, [(PO3H2)2bpy)2Ru(4-Mebpy-4-bimpy)Rub(tpy)(OH2)]4+, which combines both light absorber and water oxidation catalyst in a single molecule, was attached to the TiO2 shell. Visible photolysis of the resulting core–shell assembly structure with a Pt cathode resulted in water splitting into hydrogen and oxygen with an absorbed photon conversion efficiency of 4.4% at peak photocurrent.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Finding the Way to Solar Fuels with Dye-Sensitized Photoelectrosynthesis Cells

M. Kyle Brennaman; Robert J. Dillon; Leila Alibabaei; Melissa K. Gish; Christopher J. Dares; Dennis L. Ashford; Ralph L. House; Gerald J. Meyer; John M. Papanikolas; Thomas J. Meyer

The dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell (DSPEC) integrates high bandgap, nanoparticle oxide semiconductors with the light-absorbing and catalytic properties of designed chromophore-catalyst assemblies. The goals are photoelectrochemical water splitting into hydrogen and oxygen and reduction of CO2 by water to give oxygen and carbon-based fuels. Solar-driven water oxidation occurs at a photoanode and water or CO2 reduction at a cathode or photocathode initiated by molecular-level light absorption. Light absorption is followed by electron or hole injection, catalyst activation, and catalytic water oxidation or water/CO2 reduction. The DSPEC is of recent origin but significant progress has been made. It has the potential to play an important role in our energy future.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2015

Visible photoelectrochemical water splitting into H2 and O2 in a dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell.

Leila Alibabaei; Benjamin D. Sherman; Michael R. Norris; M. Kyle Brennaman; Thomas J. Meyer

Significance Mesoporous SnO2/TiO2 core/shell nanostructured electrodes derivatized with a surface-bound Ru(II) polypyridyl-based chromophore–catalyst assembly are used for water splitting into H2 and O2 with visible light in a dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell. Photocurrents with a small applied bias are among the highest reported. Stabilization of the assembly on the surface of the TiO2 shell by using atomic layer deposition to deposit overlayers of Al2O3 or TiO2 results in long-term water splitting even in a phosphate buffer at pH 7. A hybrid strategy for solar water splitting is exploited here based on a dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell (DSPEC) with a mesoporous SnO2/TiO2 core/shell nanostructured electrode derivatized with a surface-bound Ru(II) polypyridyl-based chromophore–catalyst assembly. The assembly, [(4,4’-(PO3H2)2bpy)2Ru(4-Mebpy-4’-bimpy)Ru(tpy)(OH2)]4+ ([RuaII-RubII-OH2]4+, combines both a light absorber and a water oxidation catalyst in a single molecule. It was attached to the TiO2 shell by phosphonate-surface oxide binding. The oxide-bound assembly was further stabilized on the surface by atomic layer deposition (ALD) of either Al2O3 or TiO2 overlayers. Illumination of the resulting fluorine-doped tin oxide (FTO)|SnO2/TiO2|-[RuaII-RubII-OH2]4+(Al2O3 or TiO2) photoanodes in photoelectrochemical cells with a Pt cathode and a small applied bias resulted in visible-light water splitting as shown by direct measurements of both evolved H2 and O2. The performance of the resulting DSPECs varies with shell thickness and the nature and extent of the oxide overlayer. Use of the SnO2/TiO2 core/shell compared with nanoITO/TiO2 with the same assembly results in photocurrent enhancements of ∼5. Systematic variations in shell thickness and ALD overlayer lead to photocurrent densities as high as 1.97 mA/cm2 with 445-nm, ∼90-mW/cm2 illumination in a phosphate buffer at pH 7.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2013

Crossing the divide between homogeneous and heterogeneous catalysis in water oxidation.

Aaron K. Vannucci; Leila Alibabaei; Mark D. Losego; Javier J. Concepcion; Berç Kalanyan; Gregory N. Parsons; Thomas J. Meyer

Significance An atomic layer deposition (ALD) procedure is described for stabilizing surface binding of a water oxidation catalyst to the surfaces of nanostructured films of indium tin oxide. The catalyst is stabilized on the surface of electrodes by ALD of an overlayer of TiO2. Stabilization of surface binding allows use of basic solutions where a rate enhancement for water oxidation of ∼106 is observed compared with acidic conditions. There are important implications for stabilizing surface-bound molecular assemblies for applications in dye sensitized solar cells, electrocatalysis, and photoelectrocatalysis. Enhancing the surface binding stability of chromophores, catalysts, and chromophore–catalyst assemblies attached to metal oxide surfaces is an important element in furthering the development of dye sensitized solar cells, photoelectrosynthesis cells, and interfacial molecular catalysis. Phosphonate-derivatized catalysts and molecular assemblies provide a basis for sustained water oxidation on these surfaces in acidic solution but are unstable toward hydrolysis and loss from surfaces as the pH is increased. Here, we report enhanced surface binding stability of a phosphonate-derivatized water oxidation catalyst over a wide pH range (1–12) by atomic layer deposition of an overlayer of TiO2. Increased stability of surface binding, and the reactivity of the bound catalyst, provides a hybrid approach to heterogeneous catalysis combining the advantages of systematic modifications possible by chemical synthesis with heterogeneous reactivity. For the surface-stabilized catalyst, greatly enhanced rates of water oxidation are observed upon addition of buffer bases and with a pathway identified in which O-atom transfer to OH− occurs with a rate constant increase of 106 compared to water oxidation in acid.


Nano Letters | 2013

Solution-Processed, Antimony-Doped Tin Oxide Colloid Films Enable High-Performance TiO2 Photoanodes for Water Splitting

Qing Peng; Berç Kalanyan; Paul G. Hoertz; Andrew Miller; Do Han Kim; Kenneth Hanson; Leila Alibabaei; Jie Liu; Thomas J. Meyer; Gregory N. Parsons; Jeffrey T. Glass

Photoelectrochemical (PEC) water splitting and solar fuels hold great promise for harvesting solar energy. TiO2-based photoelectrodes for water splitting have been intensively investigated since 1972. However, solar-to-fuel conversion efficiencies of TiO2 photoelectrodes are still far lower than theoretical values. This is partially due to the dilemma of a short minority carrier diffusion length, and long optical penetration depth, as well as inefficient electron collection. We report here the synthesis of TiO2 PEC electrodes by coating solution-processed antimony-doped tin oxide nanoparticle films (nanoATO) on FTO glass with TiO2 through atomic layer deposition. The conductive, porous nanoATO film-supported TiO2 electrodes, yielded a highest photocurrent density of 0.58 mA/cm(2) under AM 1.5G simulated sunlight of 100 mW/cm(2). This is approximately 3× the maximum photocurrent density of planar TiO2 PEC electrodes on FTO glass. The enhancement is ascribed to the conductive interconnected porous nanoATO film, which decouples the dimensions for light absorption and charge carrier diffusion while maintaining efficient electron collection. Transient photocurrent measurements showed that nanoATO films reduce charge recombination by accelerating transport of photoelectrons through the less defined conductive porous nanoATO network. Owing to the large band gap, scalable solution processed porous nanoATO films are promising as a framework to replace other conductive scaffolds for PEC electrodes.


Nano Letters | 2014

Atomic layer deposition of TiO2 on mesoporous nanoITO: Conductive core-shell photoanodes for dye-sensitized solar cells

Leila Alibabaei; Byron H. Farnum; Berç Kalanyan; M. Kyle Brennaman; Mark D. Losego; Gregory N. Parsons; Thomas J. Meyer

Core-shell structures consisting of thin shells of conformal TiO2 deposited on high surface area, conductive Sn-doped In2O3 nanoparticle. Mesoscopic films were synthesized by atomic layer deposition and studied for application in dye-sensitized solar cells. Results obtained with the N719 dye show that short-circuit current densities, open-circuit voltages, and back electron transfer lifetimes all increased with increasing TiO2 shell thickness up to 1.8-2.4 nm and then decline as the thickness was increased further. At higher shell thicknesses, back electron transfer to -Ru(III) is increasingly competitive with transport to the nanoITO core resulting in decreased device efficiencies.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2014

Visible Light Driven Benzyl Alcohol Dehydrogenation in a Dye-Sensitized Photoelectrosynthesis Cell

Wenjing Song; Aaron K. Vannucci; Byron H. Farnum; Alexander M. Lapides; M. Kyle Brennaman; Berç Kalanyan; Leila Alibabaei; Javier J. Concepcion; Mark D. Losego; Gregory N. Parsons; Thomas J. Meyer

Light-driven dehydrogenation of benzyl alcohol (BnOH) to benzaldehyde and hydrogen has been shown to occur in a dye-sensitized photoelectrosynthesis cell (DSPEC). In the DSPEC, the photoanode consists of mesoporous films of TiO2 nanoparticles or of core/shell nanoparticles with tin-doped In2O3 nanoparticle (nanoITO) cores and thin layers of TiO2 deposited by atomic layer deposition (nanoITO/TiO2). Metal oxide surfaces were coderivatized with both a ruthenium polypyridyl chromophore in excess and an oxidation catalyst. Chromophore excitation and electron injection were followed by cross-surface electron-transfer activation of the catalyst to -Ru(IV)═O(2+), which then oxidizes benzyl alcohol to benzaldehyde. The injected electrons are transferred to a Pt electrode for H2 production. The nanoITO/TiO2 core/shell structure causes a decrease of up to 2 orders of magnitude in back electron-transfer rate compared to TiO2. At the optimized shell thickness, sustained absorbed photon to current efficiency of 3.7% was achieved for BnOH dehydrogenation, an enhancement of ~10 compared to TiO2.


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.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2013

Application of the rotating ring-disc-electrode technique to water oxidation by surface-bound molecular catalysts.

Javier J. Concepcion; Robert A. Binstead; Leila Alibabaei; Thomas J. Meyer

We report here the application of a simple hydrodynamic technique, linear sweep voltammetry with a modified rotating-ring-disc electrode, for the study of water oxidation catalysis. With this technique, we have been able to reliably obtain turnover frequencies, overpotentials, Faradaic conversion efficiencies, and mechanistic information from single samples of surface-bound metal complex catalysts.

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Thomas J. Meyer

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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Dennis L. Ashford

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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Javier J. Concepcion

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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John M. Papanikolas

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Kenneth Hanson

Florida State University

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Animesh Nayak

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill

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Berç Kalanyan

North Carolina State University

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Gregory N. Parsons

North Carolina State University

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