Published August 7, 2023
| Version v1
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Non-Covalent Interactions Mimic the Covalent: An Electrode-Orthogonal Self-Assembled Layer
- 1. University of Chicago
Description
Charge-transfer events central to energy conversion and storage and molecular sensing occur at electrified interfaces. Synthetic control over the interface is traditionally accessed through electrode-specific covalent tethering of molecules. Covalent linkages inherently limit the scope and the potential stability window of molecularly tunable electrodes. Here, we report a synthetic strategy that is agnostic to the electrode's surface chemistry to molecularly define electrified interfaces. We append ferrocene redox reporters to amphiphiles, utilizing non-covalent electrostatic and van der Waals interactions to prepare a self-assembled layer stable over a 2.9 V range. The layer's voltammetric response and in situ infrared spectra mimic those reported for analogous covalently bound ferrocene. This design is electrode-orthogonal; layer self-assembly is reversible and independent of the underlying electrode material's surface chemistry. We demonstrate that the design can be utilized across a wide range of electrode material classes (transition metal, carbon, carbon composites) and morphologies (nanostructured, planar). Merging atomically precise organic synthesis of amphiphiles with in situ non-covalent self-assembly at polarized electrodes, our work sets the stage for predictive and non-fouling synthetic control over electrified interfaces.
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badgurjar-et-al-2023-non-covalent-interactions-mimic-the-covalent-an-electrode-orthogonal-self-assembled-layer.pdf
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Additional details
Identifiers
- DOI
- 10.1021/jacs.3c04387
- Other
- oai:uchicago.tind.io:13490
Funding
- National Science Foundation
- CHE-1048528
- National Science Foundation
- DMR-2011854
- Neubauer
- Family Assistant Professorship
- American Chemical Society
- Petroleum Research Fund