Lutz Grubert
Humboldt University of Berlin
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Publication
Featured researches published by Lutz Grubert.
Nature Chemistry | 2012
Emanuele Orgiu; Núria Crivillers; Martin Herder; Lutz Grubert; Michael Pätzel; Johannes Frisch; Egon Pavlica; Duc T. Duong; Gvido Bratina; Alberto Salleo; Norbert Koch; Stefan Hecht; Paolo Samorì
Organic semiconductors are suitable candidates for printable, flexible and large-area electronics. Alongside attaining an improved device performance, to confer a multifunctional nature to the employed materials is key for organic-based logic applications. Here we report on the engineering of an electronic structure in a semiconducting film by blending two molecular components, a photochromic diarylethene derivative and a poly(3-hexylthiophene) (P3HT) matrix, to attain phototunable and bistable energy levels for the P3HTs hole transport. As a proof-of-concept we exploited this blend as a semiconducting material in organic thin-film transistors. The device illumination at defined wavelengths enabled reversible tuning of the diarylethenes electronic states in the blend, which resulted in modulation of the output current. The device photoresponse was found to be in the microsecond range, and thus on a technologically relevant timescale. This modular blending approach allows for the convenient incorporation of various molecular components, which opens up perspectives on multifunctional devices and logic circuits.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Martin Herder; Bernd Schmidt; Lutz Grubert; Michael Pätzel; Jutta Schwarz; Stefan Hecht
When applying photochromic switches as functional units in light-responsive materials or devices, an often disregarded yet crucial property is their resistance to fatigue during photoisomerization. In the large family of diarylethene photoswitches, formation of an annulated isomer as a byproduct of the photochromic reaction turns out to prevent the desired high reversibility for many different derivatives. To overcome this general problem, we have synthesized and thoroughly investigated the fatigue behavior of a series of diarylethenes, varying the nature of the hetaryl moieties, the bridging units, and the substituents. By analysis of photokinetic data, a quantification of the tendency for byproduct formation in terms of quantum yields could be achieved, and a strong dependency on the electronic properties of the substituents was observed. In particular, substitution with 3,5-bis(trifluoromethyl)phenyl or 3,5-bis(pentafluorosulfanyl)phenyl groups strongly suppresses the byproduct formation and opens up a general strategy to construct highly fatigue-resistant diarylethene photochromic systems with a large structural flexibility.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012
Robert Göstl; Björn Kobin; Lutz Grubert; Michael Pätzel; Stefan Hecht
Better switching: The introduction of bulky substituents into the bridge moiety of dithienylethenes led to derivatives exhibiting high photocyclization quantum yields. This novel and versatile form of substitution facilitated tuning of the switching performance without compromising on the optical and redox properties of the ring-open and ring-closed forms (see scheme).
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Sebastian Fredrich; Robert Göstl; Martin Herder; Lutz Grubert; Stefan Hecht
A diarylethene photoswitch was covalently connected to two small triplet sensitizer moieties in a conjugated and nonconjugated fashion and the photochromic performance of the resulting compounds was investigated. In comparison with the parent diarylethene (without sensitizers) and one featuring saturated linkages, the conjugated photoswitch offers superior fatigue resistance upon visible-light excitation due to effective triplet energy transfer from the biacetyl termini to the diarylethene core. Our design makes it possible to switch diarylethenes with visible light in both directions in a highly efficient and robust fashion based on extending π-conjugation and by-product-free ring-closure via the triplet manifold.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2001
Sabine Arndt; Ulrich Emde; Thorsten Friedrich; Lutz Grubert; Ulrich Koert
The natural product hybrids quinone-mucocin and quinone- squamocin D were synthesized. In these hybrids, the butenolide unit of the annonaceous acetogenins mucocin and squamocin D is exchanged for the quinone moiety of the natural complex I substrate ubiquinone. For both syntheses, a modular, highly convergent approach was applied. Quinone-mucocin was constructed out of a tetrahydropyran (THP) component 1, a tetrahydrofuran (THF) unit 2, and a quinone precursor 3. A stereoselective, organometallic coupling reaction was chosen for the addition of the THP unit to the rest of the molecule. In the final step, the oxidation to the free quinone was achieved by using cerium(IV) ammonium nitrate (CAN) as the oxidizing agent. Quinone-squamocin D was assembled in a similar manner, from the chiral side chain bromide 16, the central bis-THF core 17, and the quinone precursor 18. Inhibition of complex I (isolated from bovine heart mitochondria) by the quinone acetogenins and several smaller building blocks was examined; quinone mucocin and quinone-squamocin D act as strong inhibitors of complex I. These results and the data from the smaller substructures indicate that other substructures of the acetogenins besides the butenolide group, such as the polyether component and the lipophilic left-hand side chain, are necessary for the strong binding of the acetogenins to complex I.
Chemical Communications | 2011
Martin Herder; Michael Pätzel; Lutz Grubert; Stefan Hecht
Photochromic bis(thiazol-4-yl)maleimides, displaying enhanced binding affinity to complementary melamine receptors in their ring-closed switching state, have been developed and could pave the way to light-responsive supramolecular assemblies.
Chemical Science | 2013
Martin Herder; Manuel Utecht; Nicole Manicke; Lutz Grubert; Michael Pätzel; Peter Saalfrank; Stefan Hecht
The photochemistry as well as electrochemistry of novel donor–acceptor bis(morpholinothiazolyl)–maleimides has been investigated. Proper substitution of these diarylethene-type molecular switches leads to the unique situation in which their ring-closure can only be accomplished electrochemically, while ring-opening can only be achieved photochemically. Hence, these switches operate with orthogonal stimuli, i.e. redox potential and light, respectively. The switch system could be optimized by introducing trifluoromethyl groups at the reactive carbon atoms in order to avoid by-product formation during oxidative ring closure. Both photochemical and electrochemical pathways were investigated for methylated, trifluoromethylated, and nonsymmetrical bis(morpholinothiazolyl)maleimides as well as the bis(morpholinothiazolyl)cyclopentene reference compound. With the aid of the nonsymmetrical “mixed” derivative, the mechanism of electrochemically driven ring closure could be elucidated and seems to proceed via a dicationic intermediate generated by two-fold oxidation. All experimental work has been complemented by density functional theory that provides detailed insights into the thermodynamics of the ring-open and closed forms, the nature of their excited states, and the reactivity of their neutral as well as ionized species in different electronic configurations. The particular diarylethene systems described herein could serve in multifunctional (logic) devices operated by different stimuli (inputs) and may pave the way to converting light into electrical energy via photoinduced “pumping” of redox-active meta-stable states.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2012
Bj€orn Kobin; Lutz Grubert; Sylke Blumstengel; F. Henneberger; Stefan Hecht
A novel synthetic route to even-numbered ladder-type oligo(p-phenylene)s (LOPPs) carrying no solubilizing groups to facilitate vacuum-processing is presented. The influence of increasing bridging adjacent phenylene units on the optical and electrochemical properties is discussed in the series of p-sexiphenyl 6P, terfluorene 3F, and ladder-type sexiphenyl L6P. The influence of the extension of the π-system is taken into consideration as well. Furthermore it is shown that highly ordered thin films of L6P on alumina surfaces can be prepared by organic molecular beam deposition (OMBD).
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Alexis Goulet-Hanssens; Manuel Utecht; Dragos Mutruc; Evgenii Titov; Jutta Schwarz; Lutz Grubert; David Bléger; Peter Saalfrank; Stefan Hecht
A variety of azobenzenes were synthesized to study the behavior of their E and Z isomers upon electrochemical reduction. Our results show that the radical anion of the Z isomer is able to rapidly isomerize to the corresponding E configured counterpart with a dramatically enhanced rate as compared to the neutral species. Due to a subsequent electron transfer from the formed E radical anion to the neutral Z starting material the overall transformation is catalytic in electrons; i.e., a substoichiometric amount of reduced species can isomerize the entire mixture. This pathway greatly increases the efficiency of (photo)switching while also allowing one to reach photostationary state compositions that are not restricted to the spectral separation of the individual azobenzene isomers and their quantum yields. In addition, activating this radical isomerization pathway with photoelectron transfer agents allows us to override the intrinsic properties of an azobenzene species by triggering the reverse isomerization direction (Z → E) by the same wavelength of light, which normally triggers E → Z isomerization. The behavior we report appears to be general, implying that the metastable isomer of a photoswitch can be isomerized to the more stable one catalytically upon reduction, permitting the optimization of azobenzene switching in new as well as indirect ways.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Javier Moreno; Mario Gerecke; Lutz Grubert; Sergey A. Kovalenko; Stefan Hecht
Two-NIR-photon-triggered Z→E isomerization of an azobenzene was accomplished by covalently linking a two-photon-harvesting triarylamine antenna to a thermally stable ortho-fluorinated azobenzene derivative. The obtained photoswitch is fully addressable with visible and NIR light by using one-photon and two-photon excitation, respectively, with the latter offering enhanced penetration depth and improved spatial resolution.