Pierre Guiglion
University College London
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Publication
Featured researches published by Pierre Guiglion.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Reiner Sebastian Sprick; Jia-Xing Jiang; Baltasar Bonillo; Shijie Ren; Thanchanok Ratvijitvech; Pierre Guiglion; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg; Dave J. Adams; Andrew I. Cooper
Photocatalytic hydrogen production from water offers an abundant, clean fuel source, but it is challenging to produce photocatalysts that use the solar spectrum effectively. Many hydrogen-evolving photocatalysts are active in the ultraviolet range, but ultraviolet light accounts for only 3% of the energy available in the solar spectrum at ground level. Solid-state crystalline photocatalysts have light absorption profiles that are a discrete function of their crystalline phase and that are not always tunable. Here, we prepare a series of amorphous, microporous organic polymers with exquisite synthetic control over the optical gap in the range 1.94-2.95 eV. Specific monomer compositions give polymers that are robust and effective photocatalysts for the evolution of hydrogen from water in the presence of a sacrificial electron donor, without the apparent need for an added metal cocatalyst. Remarkably, unlike other organic systems, the best performing polymer is only photoactive under visible rather than ultraviolet irradiation.
Angewandte Chemie | 2016
Reiner Sebastian Sprick; Baltasar Bonillo; Rob Clowes; Pierre Guiglion; Nick J. Brownbill; Benjamin J. Slater; Frédéric Blanc; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg; Dave J. Adams; Andrew I. Cooper
Abstract Linear poly(p‐phenylene)s are modestly active UV photocatalysts for hydrogen production in the presence of a sacrificial electron donor. Introduction of planarized fluorene, carbazole, dibenzo[b,d]thiophene or dibenzo[b,d]thiophene sulfone units greatly enhances the H2 evolution rate. The most active dibenzo[b,d]thiophene sulfone co‐polymer has a UV photocatalytic activity that rivals TiO2, but is much more active under visible light. The dibenzo[b,d]thiophene sulfone co‐polymer has an apparent quantum yield of 2.3 % at 420 nm, as compared to 0.1 % for platinized commercial pristine carbon nitride.
Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2014
Pierre Guiglion; Cristina Butchosa; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg
A computational scheme to predict the thermodynamic ability of photocatalysts to drive both of the watersplitting half reactions, proton reduction and water oxidation, is discussed, and applied to a number of polymeric systems to explain their apparent inability to oxidise water. We predict that the poly(p-phenylene) (PPP) is thermodynamically unable to oxidise water and that PPP is hence unlikely to split water in the absence of an external electrical bias. For other polymers, however, for example carbon nitride, the lack of oxygen evolution activity appears kinetic in origin and hence a suitable co-catalyst could potentially transform them into true watersplitting photocatalysts.
Journal of Physics: Condensed Matter | 2016
Pierre Guiglion; Enrico Berardo; Cristina Butchosa; Milena C. C. Wobbe; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg
In this mini-review, we discuss what insight computational modelling can provide into the working of photocatalysts for solar fuel synthesis and how calculations can be used to screen for new promising materials for photocatalytic water splitting and carbon dioxide reduction. We will extensively discuss the different relevant (material) properties and the computational approaches (DFT, TD-DFT, GW/BSE) available to model them. We illustrate this with examples from the literature, focussing on polymeric and nanoparticle photocatalysts. We finish with a perspective on the outstanding conceptual and computational challenges.
Angewandte Chemie | 2018
Reiner Sebastian Sprick; Baltasar Bonillo; Rob Clowes; Pierre Guiglion; Nick J. Brownbill; Benjamin J. Slater; Frédéric Blanc; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg; Dave J. Adams; Andrew I. Cooper
Linear poly(p-phenylene)s are modestly active UV photocatalysts for hydrogen production in the presence of a sacrificial electron donor. Introduction of planarized fluorene, carbazole, dibenzo[b,d]thiophene or dibenzo[b,d]thiophene sulfone units greatly enhances the H2 evolution rate. The most active dibenzo[b,d]thiophene sulfone co-polymer has a UV photocatalytic activity that rivals TiO2, but is much more active under visible light. The dibenzo[b,d]thiophene sulfone co-polymer has an apparent quantum yield of 2.3 % at 420 nm, as compared to 0.1 % for platinized commercial pristine carbon nitride.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014
Cristina Butchosa; Pierre Guiglion; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg
Macromolecular Chemistry and Physics | 2016
Pierre Guiglion; Cristina Butchosa; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg
Polymer | 2017
Christian B. Meier; Reiner Sebastian Sprick; Adriano Monti; Pierre Guiglion; Jet-Sing M. Lee; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg; Andrew I. Cooper
Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics | 2015
Pierre Guiglion; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017
Pierre Guiglion; Adriano Monti; Martijn A. Zwijnenburg