Martin Humphries
Sumitomo Chemical
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Publication
Featured researches published by Martin Humphries.
Chemistry: A European Journal | 2016
Daniel L. Crossley; Iñigo J. Vitorica-Yrezabal; Martin Humphries; Michael L. Turner; Michael J. Ingleson
Abstract Stille, Suzuki–Miyaura and Negishi cross‐coupling reactions of bromine‐functionalised borylated precursors enable the facile, high yielding, synthesis of borylated donor–acceptor materials that contain electron‐rich aromatic units and/or extended effective conjugation lengths. These materials have large Stokes shifts, low LUMO energies, small band‐gaps and significant fluorescence emission >700 nm in solution and when dispersed in a host polymer.
Advanced Materials | 2017
Donggeon Han; Yasser Khan; Jonathan Ting; Simon King; Nir Yaacobi-Gross; Martin Humphries; Christopher Newsome; Ana Claudia Arias
A method to print two materials of different functionality during the same printing step is presented. In printed electronics, devices are built layer by layer and conventionally only one type of material is deposited in one pass. Here, the challenges involving printing of two emissive materials to form polymer light-emitting diodes (PLEDs) that emit light of different wavelengths without any significant changes in the device characteristics are described. The surface-energy-patterning technique is utilized to print materials in regions of interest. This technique proves beneficial in reducing the amount of ink used during blade coating and improving the reproducibility of printed films. A variety of colors (green, red, and near-infrared) are demonstrated and characterized. This is the first known attempt to print multiple materials by blade coating. These devices are further used in conjunction with a commercially available photodiode to perform blood oxygenation measurements on the wrist, where common accessories are worn. Prior to actual application, the threshold conditions for each color are discussed, in order to acquire a stable and reproducible photoplethysmogram (PPG) signal. Finally, based on the conditions, PPG and oxygenation measurements are successfully performed on the wrist with green and red PLEDs.
ACS Applied Materials & Interfaces | 2017
Daniel L. Crossley; Laura Urbano; Robert Neumann; Struan Bourke; Jennifer Jones; Lea Ann Dailey; Mark Green; Martin Humphries; Simon King; Michael L. Turner; Michael J. Ingleson
Post-polymerization modification of the donor-acceptor polymer, poly(9,9-dioctylfluorene-alt-benzothiadiazole), PF8-BT, by electrophilic C-H borylation is a simple method to introduce controllable quantities of near-infrared (near-IR) emitting chromophore units into the backbone of a conjugated polymer. The highly stable borylated unit possesses a significantly lower LUMO energy than the pristine polymer resulting in a reduction in the band gap of the polymer by up to 0.63 eV and a red shift in emission of more than 150 nm. Extensively borylated polymers absorb strongly in the deep red/near-IR and are highly emissive in the near-IR region of the spectrum in solution and solid state. Photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY) values are extremely high in the solid state for materials with emission maxima ≥ 700 nm with PLQY values of 44% at 700 nm and 11% at 757 nm for PF8-BT with different borylation levels. This high brightness enables efficient solution processed near-IR emitting OLEDs to be fabricated and highly emissive borylated polymer loaded conjugated polymer nanoparticles (CPNPs) to be prepared. The latter are bright, photostable, low toxicity bioimaging agents that in phantom mouse studies show higher signal to background ratios for emission at 820 nm than the ubiquitous near-IR emissive bioimaging agent indocyanine green. This methodology represents a general approach for the post-polymerization functionalization of donor-acceptor polymers to reduce the band gap as confirmed by the C-H borylation of poly((9,9-dioctylfluorene)-2,7-diyl-alt-[4,7-bis(3-hexylthien-5-yl)-2,1,3-benzothiadiazole]-2c,2cc-diyl) (PF8TBT) resulting in a red shift in emission of >150 nm, thereby shifting the emission maximum to 810 nm.
Journal of Photonics for Energy | 2011
Martin Humphries; Richard Wilson; Oscar Fernandez; Robert Archer
A device structure that enables the combination of phosphorescent green and fluorescent blue emitters in a solution processed polymer organic light-emitting diode device has been developed. Results demonstrate that it is possible to tune the color of emission by appropriate formulation of the polymers that are used. This enabled the development of a warm white device that had CIE coordinates of (0.462, 0.426), and an external quantum efficiency (EQE) of 13.1%. This EQE was limited by the efficiencies of the emitters used rather than through any internal quenching, and thus the device structure offers potential for further development.
Journal of Polymer Science Part A | 2017
Andrew B. Foster; Viktor Bagutski; Josue I. Ayuso-Carrillo; Martin Humphries; Michael J. Ingleson; Michael L. Turner
ABSTRACT Polytriarylamine copolymers can be prepared by Suzuki‐Miyaura cross‐coupling reactions of bis N‐methyliminodiacetic acid (MIDA) boronate ester substituted arylamines with dibromo arenes. The roles of solvent composition, temperature, reaction time, and co‐monomer structure were examined and (co)polymers prepared containing 9, 9‐dioctylfluorene (F8), 4‐sec‐butyl or 4‐octylphenyl diphenyl amine (TFB), and N, N′‐bis(4‐octylphenyl)‐N, N′‐diphenyl phenylenediamine (PTB) units, using a Pd(OAc)2/2‐dicyclohexylphosphino‐2′,6′‐dimethoxybiphenyl (SPhos) catalyst system. The performance of a di‐functionalized MIDA boronate ester monomer was compared with that of an equivalent pinacol boronate ester. Higher molar mass polymers were produced from reactions starting with a difunctionalized pinacol boronate ester monomer than the equivalent difunctionalized MIDA boronate ester monomer in biphase solvent mixtures (toluene/dioxane/water). Matrix‐assisted laser desorption/ionization mass spectroscopic analysis revealed that polymeric structures rich in residues associated with the starting MIDA monomer were present, suggesting that homo‐coupling of the boronate ester must be occurring to the detriment of cross‐coupling in the step‐growth polymerization. However, when comparable reactions of the two boronate monomers with a dibromo fluorene monomer were completed in a single phase solvent mixture (dioxane + water), high molar mass polymers with relatively narrow distribution ranges were obtained after only 4 h of reaction.
Chemical Science | 2015
Daniel L. Crossley; Ian A. Cade; Ewan R. Clark; Aude Escande; Martin Humphries; Simon King; Iñigo J. Vitorica-Yrezabal; Michael J. Ingleson; Michael L. Turner
Archive | 2011
Martin Humphries; Simon King; Jonathan Pillow
Archive | 2012
Martin Humphries; Torsten Bünnagel
Archive | 2012
Martin Humphries; Florence Bourcet; Sheena Zuberi
Archive | 2012
Martin Humphries; Richard Wilson