Subhajyoti Chaudhuri
Yale University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Subhajyoti Chaudhuri.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Zachary S. Fishman; Benjamin Rudshteyn; Yulian He; Bolun Liu; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Mikhail Askerka; Gary L. Haller; Victor S. Batista; Lisa D. Pfefferle
CuO is a nonhazardous, earth-abundant material that has exciting potential for use in solar cells, photocatalysis, and other optoelectronic applications. While progress has been made on the characterization of properties and reactivity of CuO, there remains significant controversy on how to control the precise band gap by tuning conditions of synthetic methods. Here, we combine experimental and theoretical methods to address the origin of the wide distribution of reported band gaps for CuO nanosheets. We establish reaction conditions to control the band gap and reactivity via a high-temperature treatment in an oxygen-rich environment. SEM, TEM, XRD, and BET physisorption reveals little to no change in nanostructure, crystal structure, or surface area. In contrast, UV-vis spectroscopy shows a modulation in the material band gap over a range of 330 meV. A similar trend is found in H2 temperature-programmed reduction where peak H2 consumption temperature decreases with treatment. Calculations of the density of states show that increasing the oxygen to copper coverage ratio of the surface accounts for most of the observed changes in the band gap. An oxygen exchange mechanism, supported by (18)O2 temperature-programmed oxidation, is proposed to be responsible for changes in the CuO nanosheet oxygen to copper stoichiometry. The changes induced by oxygen depletion/deposition serve to explain discrepancies in the band gap of CuO, as reported in the literature, as well as dramatic differences in catalytic performance.
Chemical Communications | 2016
Bradley J. Brennan; Jeffrey Chen; Benjamin Rudshteyn; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Brandon Q. Mercado; Victor S. Batista; Robert H. Crabtree; Gary W. Brudvig
Hydroxamate binding modes and protonation states have yet to be conclusively determined. Molecular titanium(iv) phenylhydroxamate complexes were synthesized as structural and spectroscopic models, and compared to functionalized TiO2 nanoparticles. In a combined experimental-theoretical study, we find that the predominant binding form is monodeprotonated, with evidence for the chelate mode.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2018
Atanu Acharya; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Victor S. Batista
The 1Lb and 1La excited states of naphthols are characterized by using time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT), configuration interaction with singles (CIS), and equation-of-motion coupled cluster singles and doubles (EOM-CCSD) methods. TDDFT fails dramatically at predicting the energy and ordering of the 1La and 1Lb excited states as observed experimentally, while EOM-CCSD accurately predicts the excited states as characterized by natural transition orbital analysis. The limitations of TDDFT are attributed to the absence of correlation from doubly excited configurations as well as the inconsistent description of excited electronic states of naphthol photoacids revealed by excitation analysis based on the one-electron transition density matrix.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017
Svante Hedström; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Nathan T. La Porte; Benjamin Rudshteyn; Jose F. Martinez; Michael R. Wasielewski; Victor S. Batista
Spin-dependent intramolecular electron transfer is revealed in the ReI(CO)3(py)(bpy-Ph)-perylenediimide radical anion (ReI-bpy-PDI-•) dyad, a prototype model system for artificial photosynthesis. Quantum chemical calculations and ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy experiments demonstrate that selective photoexcitation of ReI-bpy results in electron transfer from PDI-• to ReI-bpy, forming two distinct charge-shifted states. One is an overall doublet whose return to the ground state is spin-allowed. The other, high-spin quartet state, persists for 67 ns due to spin-forbidden back-electron transfer, constituting a more than thousandfold lifetime improvement compared to the low-spin state. Exploiting this spin dependency holds promise for artificial photosynthetic systems requiring long-lived reduced states to perform multi-electron chemistry.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2017
Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Svante Hedström; Dalvin D. Méndez-Hernández; Heidi P. Hendrickson; Kenneth A. Jung; Junming Ho; Victor S. Batista
Understanding the effect of vibronic coupling on electron transfer (ET) rates is a challenge common to a wide range of applications, from electrochemical synthesis and catalysis to biochemical reactions and solar energy conversion. The Marcus-Jortner-Levich (MJL) theory offers a model of ET rates based on a simple analytic expression with a few adjustable parameters. However, the MJL equation in conjunction with density functional theory (DFT) has yet to be established as a predictive first-principles methodology. A framework is presented for calculating transfer rates modulated by molecular vibrations, that circumvents the steep computational cost which has previously necessitated approximations such as condensing the vibrational manifold into a single empirical frequency. Our DFT-MJL approach provides robust and accurate predictions of ET rates spanning over 4 orders of magnitude in the 106-1010 s-1 range. We evaluate the full MJL equation with a Monte Carlo sampling of the entire active space of thermally accessible vibrational modes, while using no empirical parameters. The contribution to the rate of individual modes is illustrated, providing insight into the interplay between vibrational degrees of freedom and changes in electronic state. The reported findings are valuable for understanding ET rates modulated by multiple vibrational modes, relevant to a broad range of systems within the chemical sciences.
New Journal of Chemistry | 2016
Aaron J. Bloomfield; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Brandon Q. Mercado; Victor S. Batista; Robert H. Crabtree
A bicyclo[2.2.2]octane derivative containing both a tertiary amide and a methyl ester (1) was shown crystallographically to adopt a conformation in which the amide is in the cis configuration, which is sterically disfavored, but electronically favored. The steric strain induces a significant torsion (15.9°) of the amide, thereby greatly increasing the solvolytic lability of the amide to the extent that we see competitive amide solvolysis in the presence of the normally more labile methyl ester also present in the molecule.
International Conference on Ultrafast Phenomena | 2016
Mirabelle Prémont-Schwarz; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Dina Pines; Ehud Pines; Dan Huppert; Victor S. Batista; Erik T. J. Nibbering
We explore the fluorescence quenching behaviour of 1-naphthol and 2-naphthol photoacids in halocarbon solvents with time-correlated single-photon-counting and femtosecond IR-spectroscopy, and conclude that halocarbon solvents facilitate an efficient de-excitation mechanism through solute-solvent electron transfer.
Applied Surface Science | 2012
D. Ghosh; B. Ghosh; S. Hussain; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; R. Bhar; A.K. Pal
Coordination Chemistry Reviews | 2018
Nathan T. La Porte; Jose F. Martinez; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Svante Hedström; Victor S. Batista; Michael R. Wasielewski
Materials Science and Engineering B-advanced Functional Solid-state Materials | 2013
S. Hussain; D. Ghosh; B. Ghosh; Subhajyoti Chaudhuri; Radhaballabh Bhar; A.K. Pal