Wendu Ding
Yale University
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Publication
Featured researches published by Wendu Ding.
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2015
Chuanhao Li; Christopher Koenigsmann; Wendu Ding; Benjamin Rudshteyn; Ke R. Yang; Kevin P. Regan; Steven J. Konezny; Victor S. Batista; Gary W. Brudvig; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer; Jae-Hong Kim
The behavior of crystalline nanoparticles depends strongly on which facets are exposed. Some facets are more active than others, but it is difficult to selectively isolate particular facets. This study provides fundamental insights into photocatalytic and photoelectrochemical performance of three types of TiO(2) nanoparticles with predominantly exposed {101}, {010}, or {001} facets, where 86-99% of the surface area is the desired facet. Photodegradation of methyl orange reveals that {001}-TiO(2) has 1.79 and 3.22 times higher photocatalytic activity than {010} and {101}-TiO(2), respectively. This suggests that the photochemical performance is highly correlated with the surface energy and the number of under-coordinated surface atoms. In contrast, the photoelectrochemical performance of the faceted TiO(2) nanoparticles sensitized with the commercially available MK-2 dye was highest with {010}-TiO(2) which yielded an overall cell efficiency of 6.1%, compared to 3.2% for {101}-TiO(2) and 2.6% for {001}-TiO(2) prepared under analogous conditions. Measurement of desorption kinetics and accompanying computational modeling suggests a stronger covalent interaction of the dye with the {010} and {101} facets compared with the {001} facet. Time-resolved THz spectroscopy and transient absorption spectroscopy measure faster electron injection dynamics when MK-2 is bound to {010} compared to other facets, consistent with extensive computational simulations which indicate that the {010} facet provides the most efficient and direct pathway for interfacial electron transfer. Our experimental and computational results establish for the first time that photoelectrochemical performance is dependent upon the binding energy of the dye as well as the crystalline structure of the facet, as opposed to surface energy alone.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2014
Wendu Ding; Christian F. A. Negre; Leslie Vogt; Victor S. Batista
A mechanism for electronic rectification under low bias potentials is elucidated for the prototype molecule HS-phenyl-amide-phenyl-SH. We apply density functional theory (DFT) combined with the nonequilibrium Greens function formalism (NEGF), as implemented in the TranSIESTA computational code to calculate transport properties. We find that a single frontier orbital, the closest to the Fermi level, provides the dominant contribution to the overall transmission and determines the current. The asymmetric distribution of electron density in that orbital leads to rectification in charge transport due to its asymmetric response, shifting toward (or away from) the Fermi level under forward (or reverse) applied bias voltage. These findings provide a simple design principle to suppress recombination in molecular assemblies of dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) where interfacial electron transfer is mediated by frontier orbitals with asymmetric character.
Journal of Chemical Theory and Computation | 2015
Wendu Ding; Matthieu Koepf; Christopher Koenigsmann; Arunabh Batra; Latha Venkataraman; Christian F. A. Negre; Gary W. Brudvig; Robert H. Crabtree; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer; Victor S. Batista
We report a systematic computational search of molecular frameworks for intrinsic rectification of electron transport. The screening of molecular rectifiers includes 52 molecules and conformers spanning over 9 series of structural motifs. N-Phenylbenzamide is found to be a promising framework with both suitable conductance and rectification properties. A targeted screening performed on 30 additional derivatives and conformers of N-phenylbenzamide yielded enhanced rectification based on asymmetric functionalization. We demonstrate that electron-donating substituent groups that maintain an asymmetric distribution of charge in the dominant transport channel (e.g., HOMO) enhance rectification by raising the channel closer to the Fermi level. These findings are particularly valuable for the design of molecular assemblies that could ensure directionality of electron transport in a wide range of applications, from molecular electronics to catalytic reactions.
ChemPhysChem | 2014
Wendu Ding; Christian F. A. Negre; Julio L. Palma; Alec C. Durrell; Laura J. Allen; Karin J. Young; Rebecca L. Milot; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer; Gary W. Brudvig; Robert H. Crabtree; Victor S. Batista
Linkers that favor rectification of interfacial electron transfer are likely to be required for efficient photo-driven catalysis of multi-electron reactions at electrode surfaces. Design principles are discussed, together with the synthesis and characterization of a specific pair of molecular linkers, related by inversion of the direction of an amide bond in the heart of the molecule. The linkers have a terpyridyl group that can covalently bind Mn as in a well-known water oxidation catalyst and an acetylacetonate group that allows attachment to TiO2 surfaces. The appropriate choice of the sense of the amide linkage yields directionality of interfacial electron transfer, essential to enhance electron injection and slow back-electron transfer. Support comes from electron paramagnetic resonance and terahertz spectroscopic measurements, as well as computational modeling characterizing the asymmetry of electron transfer properties.
Nanoscale | 2016
Matthieu Koepf; Christopher Koenigsmann; Wendu Ding; Arunbah Batra; Christian F. A. Negre; Latha Venkataraman; Gary W. Brudvig; Victor S. Batista; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer; Robert H. Crabtree
The development of molecular components functioning as switches, rectifiers or amplifiers is a great challenge in molecular electronics. A desirable property of such components is functional robustness, meaning that the intrinsic functionality of components must be preserved regardless of the strategy used to integrate them into the final assemblies. Here, this issue is investigated for molecular diodes based on N-phenylbenzamide (NPBA) backbones. The transport properties of molecular junctions derived from NPBA are characterized while varying the nature of the functional groups interfacing the backbone and the gold electrodes required for break-junction measurements. Combining experimental and theoretical methods, it is shown that at low bias (<0.85 V) transport is determined by the same frontier molecular orbital originating from the NPBA core, regardless of the anchoring group employed. The magnitude of rectification, however, is strongly dependent on the strength of the electronic coupling at the gold-NPBA interface and on the spatial distribution of the local density of states of the dominant transport channel of the molecular junction.
New Journal of Chemistry | 2016
Christopher Koenigsmann; Wendu Ding; Matthieu Koepf; Arunabh Batra; Latha Venkataraman; Christian F. A. Negre; Gary W. Brudvig; Robert H. Crabtree; Victor S. Batista; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer
We examine structure–function relationships in a series of N-phenylbenzamide (NPBA) derivatives by using computational modeling to identify molecular structures that exhibit both rectification and good conductance together with experimental studies of bias-dependent single molecule conductance and rectification behavior using the scanning tunneling microscopy break-junction technique. From a large number of computationally screened molecular diode structures, we have identified NPBA as a promising candidate, relative to the other structures that were screened. We demonstrate experimentally that conductance and rectification are both enhanced by functionalization of the NPBA 4-carboxamido-aniline moiety with electron donating methoxy groups, and are strongly correlated with the energy of the conducting frontier orbital relative to the Fermi level of the gold leads used in break-junction experiments.
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2013
Christian F. A. Negre; Rebecca L. Milot; Lauren A. Martini; Wendu Ding; Robert H. Crabtree; Charles A. Schmuttenmaer; Victor S. Batista
Inorganic Chemistry | 2011
Timothy P. Brewster; Wendu Ding; Nathan D. Schley; Nilay Hazari; Victor S. Batista; Robert H. Crabtree
Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016
Jinquan Chen; Kaifeng Wu; Benjamin Rudshteyn; Yanyan Jia; Wendu Ding; Zhaoxiong Xie; Victor S. Batista; Tianquan Lian
Journal of Physical Chemistry C | 2014
Wendu Ding; Christian F. A. Negre; Leslie Vogt; Victor S. Batista