Logan E. Garner
University of California, Santa Barbara
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Publication
Featured researches published by Logan E. Garner.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2010
Logan E. Garner; Juhyun Park; Scott M. Dyar; Arkadiusz Chworos; James J. Sumner; Guillermo C. Bazan
We report on the modification of membranes by incorporation of phenylenevinylene oligoelectrolytes with the goal of tailoring their optical and electronic properties and their applications. A water-soluble distyrylstilbene oligoelectrolyte (DSSN+), capped at each end with nitrogen bound, terminally charged pendant groups, was synthesized. The photophysical and solvatochromatic properties of DSSN+ and the shorter distyrylbenzene analogue DSBN+ were probed and found to be useful for characterizing insertion into membranes based on phospholipid vesicle systems. A combination of UV/visible absorbance and photoluminescence spectroscopies, together with confocal microscopy, were employed to confirm membrane incorporation. Examination of the emission intensity profile in stationary multilamellar vesicles obtained with a polarized excitation source provides insight into the orientation of these chromophores within lipid bilayers and indicates that these molecules are highly ordered, such that the hydrophobic electronically delocalized region positions within the inner membrane with the long molecular axis perpendicular to the bilayer plane. Cyclic voltammetry experiments provide evidence that DSSN+ and DSBN+ facilitate transmembrane electron transport across lipid bilayers supported on glassy carbon electrodes. Additionally, the interaction with living microorganisms was probed. Fluorescence imaging indicates that DSSN+ and DSBN+ preferentially accumulate within cell membranes. Furthermore, notable increases in yeast microbial fuel cell performance were observed when employing DSSN+ as the electron transport mediator.
Nature Materials | 2010
Corey V. Hoven; Huiping Wang; Mark Elbing; Logan E. Garner; Daniel Winkelhaus; Guillermo C. Bazan
Widely used solid-state devices fabricated with inorganic semiconductors, including light-emitting diodes and solar cells, derive much of their function from the p-n junction. Such junctions lead to diode characteristics and are attained when p-doped and n-doped materials come into contact with each other. Achieving bilayer p-n junctions with semiconducting polymers has been hindered by difficulties in the deposition of thin films with independent p-doped and n-doped layers. Here we report on how to achieve permanently fixed organic p-n heterojunctions by using a cationic conjugated polyelectrolyte with fluoride counteranions and an underlayer composed of a neutral conjugated polymer bearing anion-trapping functional groups. Application of a bias leads to charge injection and fluoride migration into the neutral layer, where irreversible covalent bond formation takes place. After the initial charging and doping, one obtains devices with no delay in the turn on of light-emitting electrochemical behaviour and excellent current rectification. Such devices highlight how mobile ions in organic media can open opportunities to realize device structures in ways that do not have analogies in the world of silicon and promise new opportunities for integrating organic materials within technologies now dominated by inorganic semiconductors.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2010
Andrea Gutacker; Sylwia Adamczyk; Anke Helfer; Logan E. Garner; Rachel C. Evans; Sofia M. Fonseca; Matti Knaapila; Guillermo C. Bazan; Hugh D. Burrows; Ullrich Scherf
Novel, all-conjugated polyelectrolyte block copolymers of the rod-rod type can be generated in a “grafting from” scheme and exhibit a preferred tendency to self-assemble into layered aggregates both in solution and the solid state. Here, the rigid-rod structure of the individual, complex macromolecules favours the formation of low-curvature vesicular and lamellar aggregates. Our poly(9,9-dialkylfluorene)-b-poly[3-(6-ammoniumhexyl)thiophene] (PF2/6-b-P3TMAHT and PFO-b-P3TMAHT, where PF2/6 and PFO denote 2-(ethyl)hexyl and linear octyl alkyl pendant groups, respectively), and poly(9,9-dialkylfluorene)-b-poly[3-(6-pyridylhexyl)thiophene] (PF2/6-b-P3PyHT and PFO-b-P3PyHT) polyelectrolyte diblock copolymers allow for simple and reliable control of the occurring self-organisation process and the resulting nano-scaled architectures. They are, therefore, promising candidates for application as the active layer in electronic devices or as functional membranes (e.g. for sensor applications). Moreover, the electronic properties of the materials (especially the excitation energy transfer between both blocks) strongly depend on the aggregation state present. Aggregation can be further controlled via addition of oppositely charged surfactants resulting in the formation of ordered polyelectrolyte/surfactant complexes.
Advanced Materials | 2013
Huijie Hou; Xiaofen Chen; Alexander W. Thomas; Chelsea Catania; Nathan D. Kirchhofer; Logan E. Garner; Arum Han; Guillermo C. Bazan
A series of conjugated oligoelectrolytes with structural variations is used to stain E. coli. By taking advantage of a high-throughput screening platform that incorporates gold anodes, it is found that MFCs with COE-modified E. coli generate significantly higher power densities, relative to unmodified E. coli. These findings highlight the potential of using water-soluble molecules inspired by the work on organic semiconductors to improve electrode/microbe interfaces.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2013
Alexander W. Thomas; Logan E. Garner; Kelly P. Nevin; Trevor L. Woodard; Ashley E. Franks; Derek R. Lovley; James J. Sumner; Christian J. Sund; Guillermo C. Bazan
An amphiphilic conjugated oligoelectrolyte (COE) that spontaneously intercalates into lipid membranes enables Shewanella oneidensis to use a graphite electrode as the sole electron donor for succinate production. Current consumed in a poised electrochemical system by Shewanella with micromolar concentrations of COE correlates well with the succinate produced via fumarate reduction as determined by HPLC analysis. Confocal microscopy confirms incorporation of the COE into the microbes on the electrode surface. This work presents a unique strategy to induce favorable bioelectronic interactions for the production of reduced microbial metabolites.
Energy and Environmental Science | 2012
Logan E. Garner; Alexander W. Thomas; James J. Sumner; Steven P. Harvey; Guillermo C. Bazan
The conjugated oligoelectrolyte 4,4′-bis(4′-(N,N-bis(6′′-(N,N,N-trimethylammonium)hexyl)amino)-styryl)stilbene tetraiodide (DSSN+) has been employed to improve the performance of wastewater microbial fuel cells (MFCs) with respect to current generation and organic contaminant removal. The best performance was afforded by biocathode type MFCs run in the presence of DSSN+. Laser scanning confocal microscopy confirmed cellular uptake of DSSN+ in the biofilms.
Langmuir | 2013
Telma Costa; Logan E. Garner; Matti Knaapila; Alexander W. Thomas; Sarah E. Rogers; Guillermo C. Bazan; Hugh D. Burrows
The amphiphilic properties of conjugated oligoelectrolytes (COE) and their sensitivity to the polarity of their microenvironment lead to interesting aggregation behavior, in particular in their interaction with surfactants. Photoluminescence (PL) spectroscopy, liquid-phase atomic force microscopy, small-angle neutron scattering, small-angle X-ray scattering, and grazing-incidence X-ray diffraction were used to examine interactions between cationic p-phenylene vinylene based oligoelectrolytes and surfactants. These techniques indicate the formation of COE/surfactant aggregates in aqueous solution, and changes in the photophysical properties are observed when compared to pure aqueous solutions. We evaluate the effect of the charge of the surfactant polar headgroup, the size of the hydrophobic chain, and the role of counterions. At low COE concentrations (micromolar), it was found that these COEs display larger emission quantum efficiencies upon incorporation into micelles, along with marked blue-shifts of the PL spectra. This effect is most pronounced in the series of anionic surfactants, and the degree of blue shifts as a function of surfactant charge is as follows: cationic < nonionic < anionic surfactants. In anionic surfactants, such as sodium dodecyl sulfate (SDS), the PL spectra show vibronic resolution above the critical micelle concentration of the surfactant, suggesting more rigid structures. Scattering data indicate that in aqueous solutions, trimers appear as essentially 3-dimensional particles, while tetra- and pentamers form larger, cylindrical particles. When the molar ratio of nonionic C12E5 surfactant to 1,4-bis(4-{N,N-bis-[(N,N,N-trimethylammonium)hexyl]amino}-styryl)benzene tetraiodide (DSBNI) is close to one, the size of the formed DSBNI-C12E5 particles corresponds to the full coverage of individual oligomers. When these particles are transferred into thin films, they organize into a cubic in-plane pattern. If anionic SDS is added, the formed DSBNI-SDS particles are larger than expected for full surfactant coverage, and particles may thus contain several oligomers. This tendency is attributed to the merging of DSBNI oligomers due to the charge screening and, thus, reduced water solubility.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2014
Telma Costa; Ana T. Marques; J. Sérgio Seixas de Melo; Alexander W. Thomas; Logan E. Garner; Ullrich Scherf; Guillermo C. Bazan; Hugh D. Burrows
The interaction of the water-soluble conjugated polyelectrolyte (CPE) poly{1,4-phenylene-[9,9-bis(4-phenoxy-butylsulfonate)]fluorene-2,7-diyl} (PBS-PFP) (degree of polymerization, DP, ∼3-6) with various concentrations of a homologous series of oppositely charged amphiphilic phenylenevinylene oligomers was investigated in water:dioxane mixtures and in aqueous micellar solutions of the non-ionic surfactant n-dodecylpentaoxyethylene glycol ether. The excellent spectral overlap between the CPE fluorescence and the conjugated oligoelectrolyte (COE) absorption indicates that energy transfer between these is a highly favored process, and can be tuned by changing the COE chain length. This is supported by time-resolved fluorescence data. The overall results provide support for different types of self-assembly, which are sensitive to the solvent environment and to the size of the phenylenevinylene oligoelectrolyte chain. It is suggested that large aggregates are formed in water:dioxane mixtures, while decorated core-shell structures are present in the surfactant solutions.
Chemsuschem | 2017
Logan E. Garner; K. Xerxes Steirer; James L. Young; Nicholas C. Anderson; Elisa M. Miller; Jonathan S. Tinkham; Todd Deutsch; Alan Sellinger; John A. Turner; Nathan R. Neale
Efficient water splitting using light as the only energy input requires stable semiconductor electrodes with favorable energetics for the water-oxidation and proton-reduction reactions. Strategies to tune electrode potentials using molecular dipoles adsorbed to the semiconductor surface have been pursued for decades but are often based on weak interactions and quickly react to desorb the molecule under conditions relevant to sustained photoelectrolysis. Here, we show that covalent attachment of fluorinated, aromatic molecules to p-GaAs(1 0 0) surfaces can be employed to tune the photocurrent onset potentials of p-GaAs(1 0 0) photocathodes and reduce the external energy required for water splitting. Results indicate that initial photocurrent onset potentials can be shifted by nearly 150 mV in pH -0.5 electrolyte under 1 Sun (1000 W m-2 ) illumination resulting from the covalently bound surface dipole. Though X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy analysis reveals that the covalent molecular dipole attachment is not robust under extended 50 h photoelectrolysis, the modified surface delays arsenic oxide formation that results in a p-GaAs(1 0 0) photoelectrode operating at a sustained photocurrent density of -20.5 mA cm-2 within -0.5 V of the reversible hydrogen electrode.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2018
Logan E. Garner; Vinila Nellissery Viswanathan; Dylan H. Arias; Colin P. Brook; Steven T. Christensen; Andrew J. Ferguson; Nikos Kopidakis; Bryon W. Larson; Zbyslaw R. Owczarczyk; Jason R. Pfeilsticker; Praveen C. Ramamurthy; Steven H. Strauss; Olga V. Boltalina; Wade A. Braunecker
Two organic photovoltaic (OPV) donor materials (one polymer and one small molecule) are synthesized from the same constituent building blocks, namely thiophene units, cyclopentathiophene dione (CTD), and cyclopentadithiophene (CPDT). Photobleaching dynamics of these donor materials are then studied under white light illumination in air with blends of PC70BM and the bis-trifluoromethylfullerene 1,7-C60(CF3)2. For both the polymer and small molecule blends, C60(CF3)2 stabilizes the initial rate of photobleaching by a factor of 15 relative to PC70BM. However, once the small molecule:C60(CF3)2 blend bleaches to ∼80% of its initial optical density, the rate of photobleaching dramatically accelerates, which is not observed in the analogous polymer blend. We probe that phenomenon using time-resolved photoluminescence (TRPL) to measure PL quenching efficiencies at defined intervals during the photobleaching experiments. The data indicates the small molecule donor and C60(CF3)2 acceptor significantly de-mix with time, after which the blend begins to bleach at approximately the same rate as the neat donor sample. The work suggests that perfluoroalkylfullerenes have great potential to stabilize certain OPV active layers toward photodegradation, provided their morphology is stable.