Timothy P. Brewster
University of Washington
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Featured researches published by Timothy P. Brewster.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2013
Timothy P. Brewster; Steven J. Konezny; Stafford W. Sheehan; Lauren A. Martini; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer; Victor S. Batista; Robert H. Crabtree
We present the first analysis of performance of hydroxamate linkers as compared to carboxylate and phosphonate groups when anchoring ruthenium-polypyridyl dyes to TiO2 surfaces in dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs). The study provides fundamental insight into structure/function relationships that are critical for cell performance. Our DSSCs have been produced by using newly synthesized dye molecules and characterized by combining measurements and simulations of experimental current density-voltage (J-V) characteristic curves. We show that the choice of anchoring group has a direct effect on the overall sunlight-to-electricity conversion efficiency (η), with hydroxamate anchors showing the best performance. Solar cells based on the pyridyl-hydroxamate complex exhibit higher efficiency since they suppress electron transfer from the photoanode to the electrolyte and have superior photoinjection characteristics. These findings suggest that hydroxamate anchoring groups should be particularly valuable in DSSCs and photocatalytic applications based on molecular adsorbates covalently bound to semiconductor surfaces. In contrast, analogous acetylacetonate anchors might undergo decomposition under similar conditions suggesting limited potential in future applications.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2012
Alexander R. Parent; Timothy P. Brewster; Wendy De Wolf; Robert H. Crabtree; Gary W. Brudvig
Sodium periodate was characterized as a primary chemical oxidant for the catalytic evolution of oxygen at neutral pH using a variety of water-oxidation catalysts. The visible spectra of solutions formed from Cp*Ir(bpy)SO(4) during oxygen-evolution catalysis were measured. NMR spectroscopy suggests that the catalyst remains molecular after several turnovers with sodium periodate. Two of our [Cp*Ir(bis-NHC)][PF(6)](2) complexes, along with other literature catalysts, such as the manganese terpyridyl dimer, Hills cobalt polyoxometallate, and Meyers blue dimer, were also tested for activity. Sodium periodate was found to function only for water-oxidation catalysts with low overpotentials. This specificity is attributed to the relatively low oxidizing capability of sodium periodate solutions relative to solutions of other common primary oxidants. Studying oxygen-evolution catalysis by using sodium periodate as a primary oxidant may, therefore, provide preliminary evidence that a given catalyst has a low overpotential.
Chemical Communications | 2010
Amanda N. Ley; Lars E. Dunaway; Timothy P. Brewster; Matthew D. Dembo; T. David Harris; François Baril-Robert; Xiaobo Li; Howard H. Patterson; Robert D. Pike
Copper(i) cyanide exposed to various liquid or vapor-phase amines (L) at ambient temperature produces a variety of visible photoluminescence colors via reversible formation of amine adducts. The adducts show phase matches to authentic (CuCN)L(n), n = 0.75-2.0, produced by heating CuCN with liquid amine.
Inorganic Chemistry | 2009
Craig A. Bayse; Timothy P. Brewster; Robert D. Pike
Solid copper(I) cyanide occurs as extended one-dimensional chains with interesting photophysical properties. To explain the observed luminescence spectroscopy of CuCN, we report a series of computational studies using short bare and potassium-capped [Cu(n)(CN)(n+1)] (-) (n = 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 7) chains as CuCN models. On the basis of TD-DFT calculations of these model chains, the excitation transitions in the UV spectrum are assigned as Laporte-allowed pi-pi transitions from MOs with Cu 3d(pi) and CN pi character to empty MOs with Cu 4p and CN pi* character. Transitions between the HOMO (3d(z)) and LUMO (Cu 4p and CN pi*) are symmetry forbidden and are not assigned to the bands in the excitation spectrum. The emission spectrum is assumed to arise from transitions between the lowest triplet excited state and the ground-state singlet. The lowest energy triplet for the model networks has a bent structure due to distortions to remove the degeneracies in the partially occupied MOs of the linear triplet. The S(0)-T gap for the bent triplet chains is consistent with the emission wavelength for bulk CuCN.
Archive | 2016
Jesús Campos; Ulrich Hintermair; Timothy P. Brewster; Michael K. Takase; Robert H. Crabtree
Related Article: Jesus Campos, Ulrich Hintermair, Timothy P. Brewster, Michael K. Takase, and Robert H. Crabtree|2014|ACS Catalysis|4|973|doi:10.1021/cs401138f
Organometallics | 2011
Timothy P. Brewster; James D. Blakemore; Nathan D. Schley; Christopher D. Incarvito; Nilay Hazari; Gary W. Brudvig; Robert H. Crabtree
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2013
Timothy P. Brewster; Alexander J. M. Miller; D. Michael Heinekey; Karen I. Goldberg
ACS Catalysis | 2014
Ulrich Hintermair; Jesús Campos; Timothy P. Brewster; Lucas M. Pratt; Nathan D. Schley; Robert H. Crabtree
ACS Catalysis | 2014
Jesús Campos; Ulrich Hintermair; Timothy P. Brewster; Michael K. Takase; Robert H. Crabtree
Inorganic Chemistry | 2011
Timothy P. Brewster; Wendu Ding; Nathan D. Schley; Nilay Hazari; Victor S. Batista; Robert H. Crabtree