Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Taner Aytun is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Taner Aytun.


Advanced Materials | 2013

Direct Exfoliation of Graphite to Graphene in Aqueous Media with Diazaperopyrenium Dications

Srinivasan Sampath; Ashish N. Basuray; Karel J. Hartlieb; Taner Aytun; Samuel I. Stupp; J. Fraser Stoddart

The 2,9-dimethyldiazaperopyrenium dication can be made from a ubiquitous and inexpensive feedstock in three simple steps as its chloride salt. When mixed with powdered graphite at 23 °C, this behemoth of a molecular compound exfoliates graphite to graphene in water under mild conditions.


ACS Nano | 2012

Grooved nanowires from self-assembling hairpin molecules for solar cells.

Ian D. Tevis; Wei Wen Tsai; Liam C. Palmer; Taner Aytun; Samuel I. Stupp

One of the challenges facing bulk heterojunction organic solar cells is obtaining organized films during the phase separation of intimately mixed donor and acceptor components. We report here on the use of hairpin-shaped sexithiophene molecules to generate by self-assembly grooved nanowires as the donor component in bulk heterojunction solar cells. Photovoltaic devices were fabricated via spin-casting to produce by solvent evaporation a percolating network of self-assembled nanowires and fullerene acceptors. Thermal annealing was found to increase power conversion efficiencies by promoting domain growth while still maintaining this percolating network of nanostructures. The benefits of self-assembly and grooved nanowires were examined by building devices from a soluble sexithiophene derivative that does not form one-dimensional structures. In these systems, excessive phase separation caused by thermal annealing leads to the formation of defects and lower device efficiencies. We propose that the unique hairpin shape of the self-assembling molecules allows the nanowires as they form to interact well with the fullerenes in receptor-ligand type configurations at the heterojunction of the two domains, thus enhancing device efficiencies by 23%.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Crystal-Phase Transitions and Photocatalysis in Supramolecular Scaffolds

Roman V. Kazantsev; Adam J. Dannenhoffer; Adam S. Weingarten; Brian T. Phelan; Boris Harutyunyan; Taner Aytun; Ashwin Narayanan; Daniel J. Fairfield; Job Boekhoven; Hiroaki Sai; Andrew J. Senesi; Pascual I. O’Dogherty; Liam C. Palmer; Michael J. Bedzyk; Michael R. Wasielewski; Samuel I. Stupp

The energy landscape of a supramolecular material can include different molecular packing configurations that differ in stability and function. We report here on a thermally driven crystalline order transition in the landscape of supramolecular nanostructures formed by charged chromophore amphiphiles in salt-containing aqueous solutions. An irreversible transition was observed from a metastable to a stable crystal phase within the nanostructures. In the stable crystalline phase, the molecules end up organized in a short scroll morphology at high ionic strengths and as long helical ribbons at lower salt content. This is interpreted as the result of the competition between electrostatic repulsive forces and attractive molecular interactions. Only the stable phase forms charge-transfer excitons upon exposure to visible light as indicated by absorbance and fluorescence features, second-order harmonic generation microscopy, and femtosecond transient absorbance spectroscopy. Interestingly, the supramolecular reconfiguration to the stable crystalline phase nanostructures enhances photosensitization of a proton reduction catalyst for hydrogen production.


ACS Biomaterials Science & Engineering | 2017

Mimicking the Bioactivity of Fibroblast Growth Factor-2 Using Supramolecular Nanoribbons

Charles M. Rubert Pérez; Zaida Álvarez; Feng Chen; Taner Aytun; Samuel I. Stupp

Fibroblast growth factor (FGF-2) is a multifunctional growth factor that has pleiotropic effects in different tissues and organs. In particular, FGF-2 has a special role in angiogenesis, an important process in development, wound healing, cell survival, and differentiation. Therefore, incorporating biological agents like FGF-2 within therapeutic biomaterials is a potential strategy to create angiogenic bioactivity for the repair of damaged tissue caused by trauma or complications that arise from age and/or disease. However, the use of growth factors as therapeutic agents can be costly and does not always bring about efficient tissue repair due to rapid clearance from the targeted site. An alternative would be a stable supramolecular nanostructure with the capacity to activate the FGF-2 receptor that can also assemble into a scaffold deliverable to tissue. We report here on peptide amphiphiles that incorporate a peptide known to activate the FGF-2 receptor and peptide domains that drive its self-assembly into supramolecular nanoribbons. These FGF2-PA nanoribbons displayed the ability to increase the proliferation and migration of the human umbilical vein endothelial cells (HUVECs) in vitro to the same extent as the native FGF-2 protein at certain concentrations. We confirmed that this activity was specific to the FGFR1 signaling pathway by tracking the phosphorylation of downstream signaling effectors such ERK1/2 and pH3. These results indicated the specificity of FGF2-PA nanoribbons in activating the FGF-2 signaling pathway and its potential application as a supramolecular scaffold that can be used in vivo as an alternative to the encapsulation and delivery of the native FGF-2 protein.


Chem | 2018

Molecular Control of Internal Crystallization and Photocatalytic Function in Supramolecular Nanostructures

Roman V. Kazantsev; Adam J. Dannenhoffer; Taner Aytun; Boris Harutyunyan; Daniel J. Fairfield; Michael J. Bedzyk; Samuel I. Stupp

Supramolecular light-absorbing nanostructures are useful building blocks for the design of next-generation artificial photosynthetic systems. Development of such systems requires a detailed understanding of how molecular packing influences the materials optoelectronic properties. We describe a series of crystalline supramolecular nanostructures in which the substituents on their monomeric units strongly affects morphology, ordering kinetics, and exciton behavior. By designing constitutionally-isomeric perylene monoimide (PMI) amphiphiles, the effect of side chain sterics on nanostructure crystallization was studied. Molecules with short amine linked alkyl-tails rapidly crystallize upon dissolution in water, while bulkier tails require the addition of salt to screen electrostatic repulsion and annealing to drive crystallization. A PMI monomer bearing a 3-pentylamine tail was found to possess a unique structure that results in strongly red-shifted absorbance, indicative of charge-transfer exciton formation. This particular supramolecular structure was found to have an enhanced ability to photosensitize a thiomolybdate, [(NH4)2Mo3S13], catalyst to generate hydrogen gas.


Chemistry of Materials | 2015

Improving Solar Cell Efficiency through Hydrogen Bonding: A Method for Tuning Active Layer Morphology

Taner Aytun; Leonel Barreda; Amparo Ruiz-Carretero; Jessica A. Lehrman; Samuel I. Stupp


Journal of Materials Chemistry | 2013

Stepwise self-assembly to improve solar cell morphology

Amparo Ruiz-Carretero; Taner Aytun; Carson J. Bruns; Christina J. Newcomb; Wei Wen Tsai; Samuel I. Stupp


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2016

Self-Assembling Tripodal Small-Molecule Donors for Bulk Heterojunction Solar Cells

Taner Aytun; Peter J. Santos; Carson J. Bruns; Dongxu Huang; Andrew R. Koltonow; Monica Olvera de la Cruz; Samuel I. Stupp


Synthetic Metals | 2014

Photocurrent generation from a low band-gap and green BODIPY-based electrochromic polymer

M. Deniz Yilmaz; Taner Aytun; Marco Frasconi; Samuel I. Stupp; J. Fraser Stoddart


Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2017

Molecular Packing of Amphiphilic Nanosheets Resolved by X-ray Scattering

Boris Harutyunyan; Adam J. Dannenhoffer; Sumit Kewalramani; Taner Aytun; Daniel J. Fairfield; Samuel I. Stupp; Michael J. Bedzyk

Collaboration


Dive into the Taner Aytun's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Liam C. Palmer

Scripps Research Institute

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge