Matthijs B. J. Otten
Radboud University Nijmegen
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Featured researches published by Matthijs B. J. Otten.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2008
V. Palermo; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Andrea Liscio; E. Schwartz; P.A.J. de Witte; Mariangela Castriciano; Mm Martijn Wienk; Fabian Nolde; G. De Luca; Jeroen Johannes Lambertus Maria Cornelissen; René A. J. Janssen; Klaus Müllen; Alan E. Rowan; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Paolo Samorì
The physicochemical properties of organic (multi)component films for optoelectronic applications depend on both the mesoscopic and nanoscale architectures within the semiconducting material. Two main classes of semiconducting materials are commonly used: polymers and (liquid) crystals of small aromatic molecules. Whereas polymers (e.g., polyphenylenevinylenes and polythiophenes) are easy to process in solution in thin and uniform layers, small molecules can form highly defined (liquid) crystals featuring high charge mobilities. Herein, we combine the two material types by employing structurally well-defined polyisocyanopeptide polymers as scaffolds to precisely arrange thousands of electron-accepting molecules, namely, perylenebis(dicarboximides) (PDIs), in defined chromophoric wires with lengths of hundreds of nanometers. The polymer backbone enforces high control over the spatial location of PDI dyes, favoring both enhanced exciton and charge transfer. When blended with an electron-donor system such as regioregular poly(3-hexylthiophene), this polymeric PDI shows a relative improvement in charge generation and diffusion with respect to monomeric, aggregated PDI. In order to correlate this enhanced behavior with respect to the architecture, atomic force microscopy investigations on the mixtures were carried out. These studies revealed that the two polymers form interpenetrated bundles having a nanophase-segregated character and featuring a high density of contact points between the two different phases. In order to visualize the relationship between the architecture and the photovoltaic efficiency, Kelvin probe force microscopy measurements were carried out on submonolayer-thick films. This technique allowed for the first time the direct visualization of the photovoltaic activity occurring in such a nanoscale phase-segregated ultrathin film with true nanoscale spatial resolution, thus making possible a study of the correlation between function and architecture with nanoscale resolution.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Reza Dabirian; Vincenzo Palermo; Andrea Liscio; Erik Schwartz; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Chris E. Finlayson; Emanuele Treossi; Richard H. Friend; Gianluca Calestani; Klaus Müllen; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Alan E. Rowan; Paolo Samorì
We report on the self-assembly and the electrical characterization of bicomponent films consisting of an organic semiconducting small molecule blended with a rigid polymeric scaffold functionalized in the side chains with monomeric units of the same molecule. The molecule and polymer are a perylene-bis(dicarboximide) monomer (M-PDI) and a perylene-bis(dicarboximide)-functionalized poly(isocyanopeptide) (P-PDI), which have been codeposited on SiO(x) and mica substrates from solution. These bicomponent films have been characterized by atomic force microscopy (AFM) and Kelvin probe force microscopy (KPFM), revealing the relationship between architecture and function for various supramolecular nanocrystalline arrangements at a nanometer spatial resolution. Monomer-polymer interactions can be controlled by varying solvent and/or substrate polarity, so that either the monomer packing dictates the polymer morphology or vice versa, leading to a morphology exhibiting M-PDI nanocrystals connected with each other by P-PDI polymer wires. Compared to pure M-PDI or P-PDI films, those bicomponent films that possess polymer interconnections between crystallites of the monomer display a significant improvement in electrical connectivity and a 2 orders of magnitude increase in charge carrier mobility within the film, as measured in thin film transistor (TFT) devices. Of a more fundamental interest, our technique allows the bridging of semiconducting crystals, without the formation of injection barriers at the connection points.
Advanced Materials | 2010
Vincenzo Palermo; Erik Schwartz; Chris E. Finlayson; Andrea Liscio; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Sara Trapani; Klaus Müllen; David Beljonne; Richard H. Friend; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Alan E. Rowan; Paolo Samorì
The optimization of the electronic properties of molecular materials based on optically or electrically active organic building blocks requires a fine-tuning of their self-assembly properties at surfaces. Such a fine-tuning can be obtained on a scale up to 10 nm by mastering principles of supramolecular chemistry, i.e., by using suitably designed molecules interacting via pre-programmed noncovalent forces. The control and fine-tuning on a greater length scale is more difficult and challenging. This Research News highlights recent results we obtained on a new class of macromolecules that possess a very rigid backbone and side chains that point away from this backbone. Each side chain contains an organic semiconducting moiety, whose position and electronic interaction with neighboring moieties are dictated by the central macromolecular scaffold. A combined experimental and theoretical approach has made it possible to unravel the physical and chemical properties of this system across multiple length scales. The (opto)electronic properties of the new functional architectures have been explored by constructing prototypes of field-effect transistors and solar cells, thereby providing direct insight into the relationship between architecture and function.
Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2011
Ya-Shih Huang; Xudong Yang; Erik Schwartz; Li Ping Lu; Sebastian Albert-Seifried; Chris E. Finlayson; Matthieu Koepf; Heather J. Kitto; Burak Ulgut; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Jeroen Johannes Lambertus Maria Cornelissen; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Alan E. Rowan; Richard H. Friend
We report on the synthesis and detailed photo-physical investigation of four model chromophore side chain polyisocyanopeptides: two homopolymers of platinum-porphyrin functionalized polyisocyanopeptides (Pt-porphyrin-PIC) and perylene-bis(dicarboximide) functionalized polyisocyanopeptides (PDI-PIC), and two statistical copolymers with different ratios of Pt-porphyrin and PDI molecules attached to a rigid, helical polyisocyanopeptide backbone. (1)H NMR and circular dichroism measurements confirm that our model compounds retain a chiral architecture in the presence of the chromophores. The combination of Pt-porphyrin and PDI chromophores allows charge- and/or energy transfer to happen. We observe the excitation and relaxation pathways for selective excitation of the Pt-porphyrin and PDI chromophores. Studies of photoluminescence and transient absorption on nanosecond and picosecond scales upon excitation of Pt-porphyrin chromophores in our multichromophoric assemblies show similar photophysical features to those of the Pt-porphyrin monomers. In contrast, excitation of perylene chromophores results in a series of energy and charge transfer processes with the Pt-porphyrin group and forms additional charge-transfer states, which behave as an intermediate state that facilitates electronic coupling in these multichromophoric systems.
ACS Nano | 2016
Masoumeh Keshavarz; H. Engelkamp; Jialiang Xu; Els Braeken; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Hiroshi Uji-i; Erik Schwartz; Matthieu Koepf; Anja Vananroye; Jan Vermant; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Frans C. De Schryver; Jan C. Maan; Johan Hofkens; Peter C. M. Christianen; Alan E. Rowan
The thermal motion of polymer chains in a crowded environment is anisotropic and highly confined. Whereas theoretical and experimental progress has been made, typically only indirect evidence of polymer dynamics is obtained either from scattering or mechanical response. Toward a complete understanding of the complicated polymer dynamics in crowded media such as biological cells, it is of great importance to unravel the role of heterogeneity and molecular individualism. In the present work, we investigate the dynamics of synthetic polymers and the tube-like motion of individual chains using time-resolved fluorescence microscopy. A single fluorescently labeled polymer molecule is observed in a sea of unlabeled polymers, giving access to not only the dynamics of the probe chain itself but also to that of the surrounding network. We demonstrate that it is possible to extract the characteristic time constants and length scales in one experiment, providing a detailed understanding of polymer dynamics at the single chain level. The quantitative agreement with bulk rheology measurements is promising for using local probes to study heterogeneity in complex, crowded systems.
Soft Matter | 2009
Vincenzo Palermo; Erik Schwartz; Andrea Liscio; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Klaus Müllen; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Alan E. Rowan; Paolo Samorì
The assembly behavior at surfaces of very stiff polyisocyanopeptides (PICs) functionalized with semiconducting perylenebis(dicarboximide) (PDI) side chains has been investigated by atomic force microscopy. These multi-chromophoric arrays are unique as they combine an ultra-stiff central polymer main-chain scaffold upon which the PDI chromophores can self-organize through π–π stacking, making them interesting and versatile building blocks for nanoelectronics. In this paper we compare three PIC derivatives featuring different side groups: M1—no chromophores, M2—chromophores capable of π–π stacking, and M3—chromophores where the stacking is hindered by the presence of bulky substituents in the bay area of the PDI. The effect of the different side functionalizations on the macromolecule assembly at surfaces was compared by studying the morphology and aggregation tendency of all three polymers when adsorbed on silicon, mica and graphite substrates. Making use of nano-manipulation of these functional rods with the AFM tip gave insight into the polymer structure and its coiling behaviour.
Chemical Communications | 2003
Johan Hoogboom; Joost Clerx; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Alan E. Rowan; T.H.M. Rasing; Roeland J. M. Nolte
The directional drying of a low-salt Tris-EDTA (TE)-buffer to give an alignment layer offers a simple, one-step, non-contact procedure for the construction of parallel liquid crystal displays (LCDs), which can be used to amplify the presence of DNA to scales visible to the naked eye, opening up possibilities for easy detection of bio recognition events.
Angewandte Chemie | 2005
J.M. Smeenk; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Jens Christoph Thies; David A. Tirrell; Hendrik G. Stunnenberg; Jan C. M. van Hest
Macromolecules | 2009
Sam Foster; Chris E. Finlayson; Panagiotis E. Keivanidis; Ya-Shih Huang; Inchan Hwang; Richard H. Friend; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Li-ping Lu; Erik Schwartz; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Alan E. Rowan
Macromolecules | 2002
Paolo Samorì; Christof Ecker; Illdiko Gossl; Pieter A.J. de Witte; Jeroen Johannes Lambertus Maria Cornelissen; Gerald A. Metselaar; Matthijs B. J. Otten; Alan E. Rowan; Roeland J. M. Nolte; Juergen P. Rabe