Sujun Wei
Columbia University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Sujun Wei.
Nano Letters | 2014
Jianlong Xia; Brian Capozzi; Sujun Wei; Mikkel Strange; Arunabh Batra; Jose Ricardo Moreno; Roey J. Amir; Elizabeth Amir; Gemma C. Solomon; Latha Venkataraman; Luis M. Campos
We have designed and synthesized five azulene derivatives containing gold-binding groups at different points of connectivity within the azulene core to probe the effects of quantum interference through single-molecule conductance measurements. We compare conducting paths through the 5-membered ring, 7-membered ring, and across the long axis of azulene. We find that changing the points of connectivity in the azulene impacts the optical properties (as determined from UV-vis absorption spectra) and the conductivity. Importantly, we show here that simple models cannot be used to predict quantum interference characteristics of nonalternant hydrocarbons. As an exemplary case, we show that azulene derivatives that are predicted to exhibit destructive interference based on widely accepted atom-counting models show a significant conductance at low biases. Although simple models to predict the low-bias conductance do not hold with all azulene derivatives, we demonstrate that the measured conductance trend for all molecules studied actually agrees with predictions based on the more complete GW calculations for model systems.
Chemical Science | 2011
Chien-Yang Chiu; Bumjung Kim; Alon A. Gorodetsky; Wesley Sattler; Sujun Wei; Aaron Sattler; Michael L. Steigerwald; Colin Nuckolls
We detail a general method for the synthesis of dibenzotetrathienocoronenes and elucidate their solid state structures in crystals and co-crystals. The contorted dibenzotetrathienocoronene (c-DBTTC) is a tetrathiophene-fused version of the previously studied contorted hexabenzocoronenes (c-HBC). The synthesis detailed here is simple and provides easy access to this important class of materials. We have found that these materials display molecular flexibility and tunable supramolecular self-assembly properties in the solid state by shifting molecular conformations between two different conformations. Depending on the conditions under which a c-DBTTC-containing material crystallizes, the c-DBTTC adopts either the “up-down” or the “butterfly” conformation. When grown from the vapor phase, crystals of the unsubstituted c-DBTTC show the molecule only in the up-down conformation, and it packs into dense crystals containing columnar arrays with close intracolumnar packing. The packing is controlled by the inherent molecular corrugation of the three-dimensional core and sulfur–sulfur interactions. When grown as co-crystals with electron acceptors from solution, the butyl-substituted c-DBTTC either adopts the butterfly conformation when the electron acceptor is small enough to be completely enveloped (TCNQ) or the up-down conformation when the electron acceptor is relatively large (C60). When grown from organic solvent crystals of the butyl-substituted c-DBTTC contain molecules of the solvent as the only guest, and we observe both conformations of the c-DBTTC. Controlling the supramolecular structure is the key to developing these materials for electronic applications.
Nano Letters | 2014
Z. Liu; Sujun Wei; Hongsik Yoon; Olgun Adak; Ingrid Ponce; Yivan Jiang; Woo Dong Jang; Luis M. Campos; Latha Venkataraman; Jeffrey B. Neaton
Using scanning tunneling microscope break-junction experiments and a new first-principles approach to conductance calculations, we report and explain low-bias charge transport behavior of four types of metal-porphyrin-gold molecular junctions. A nonequilibrium Greens function approach based on self-energy corrected density functional theory and optimally tuned range-separated hybrid functionals is developed and used to understand experimental trends quantitatively. Importantly, due to the localized d states of the porphyrin molecules, hybrid functionals are essential for explaining measurements; standard semilocal functionals yield qualitatively incorrect results. Comparing directly with experiments, we show that the conductance can change by nearly a factor of 2 when different metal cations are used, counter to trends expected from gas-phase ionization energies which are relatively unchanged with the metal center. Our work explains the sensitivity of the porphyrin conductance with the metal center via a detailed and quantitative portrait of the interface electronic structure and provides a new framework for understanding transport quantitatively in complex junctions involving molecules with localized d states of relevance to light harvesting and energy conversion.
Angewandte Chemie | 2014
Sujun Wei; Jianlong Xia; Emma J. Dell; Yivan Jiang; Rui Song; Hyunbok Lee; Philip P. Rodenbough; Alejandro L. Briseno; Luis M. Campos
The use of Rozens reagent (HOF⋅CH3 CN) to convert polythiophenes to polymers containing thiophene-1,1-dioxide (TDO) is described. The oxidation of polythiophenes can be controlled with this potent, yet orthogonal reagent under mild conditions. The oxidation of poly(3-alkylthiophenes) proceeds at room temperature in a matter of minutes, introducing up to 60 % TDO moieties in the polymer backbone. The resulting polymers have a markedly low-lying lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO), consequently exhibiting a small bandgap. This approach demonstrates that modulating the backbone electronic structure of well-defined polymers, rather than varying the monomers, is an efficient means of tuning the electronic properties of conjugated polymers.
Organic Letters | 2010
Yueh-Lin Loo; Anna M. Hiszpanski; Bumjung Kim; Sujun Wei; Chien-Yang Chiu; Michael L. Steigerwald; Colin Nuckolls
Fluorinated, contorted hexabenzocoronenes (HBCs) have been synthesized in a facile manner via Suzuki-Miyaura coupling of fluorinated phenyl boronic acids followed by photocyclization and Scholl cyclization. In addition to the molecular conformation observed in previous HBC derivatives, close-contact fluorine-fluorine intramolecular interactions result in a metastable conformation not previously observed. Heating the metastable HBCs above 100 °C irreversibly converts them to the stable conformation, suggesting that the metastable conformation arises from a kinetically arrested state during cyclization.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009
Rachid Skouta; Sujun Wei; Ronald Breslow
Free-radical polymers of 4-vinylimidazole and copolymers with 1-dodecyl-4-vinylimidazole were used as enzyme mimics to transaminate pyruvic acid to alanine, phenylpyruvic acid to phenylalanine, and indole-3-pyruvic acid to tryptophan in water at pH 7.5 and 20 degrees C using pyridoxamines carrying hydrophobic side chains as coenzyme mimics. The best enzyme mimic accelerated the transamination of indole-3-pyruvic acid by a factor of 4 million relative to the rate without the polymer, a higher rate ratio than we had previously achieved with a polyaziridine-based enzyme mimic. The properties of various polyvinylimidazoles were compared, including those prepared with the RAFT modification of the polymerization process.
Bioorganic & Medicinal Chemistry Letters | 2009
Sujun Wei; Jianing Wang; Scott Venhuizen; Rachid Skouta; Ronald Breslow
PAMAM dendrimers with double thioether arms have been synthesized with a pyridoxamine core and terminal chiral amino groups. Transamination to afford natural isomers of phenylalanine and alanine induced enantioselectivity by the peripheral chiral caps, supporting a computer model that indicates folding of dendrimer chains back into the core.
Tetrahedron | 2007
Ronald Breslow; Sujun Wei; Craig S. Kenesky
Journal of Polymer Science Part B | 2014
Roddel Remy; Emily Daniels Weiss; Ngoc A. Nguyen; Sujun Wei; Luis M. Campos; Tomasz Kowalewski; Michael E. Mackay
ACS Macro Letters | 2015
Roddel Remy; Sujun Wei; Luis M. Campos; Michael E. Mackay