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Exploring the "Goldilocks Zone" of Semiconducting Polymer Photocatalysts by Donor-Acceptor Interactions

Publication at Faculty of Science, Central Library of Charles University |
2018

Abstract

Water splitting using polymer photocatalysts is a key technology to a truly sustainable hydrogen-based energy economy. Synthetic chemists have intuitively tried to enhance photocatalytic activity by tuning the length of -conjugated domains of their semiconducting polymers, but the increasing flexibility and hydrophobicity of ever-larger organic building blocks leads to adverse effects such as structural collapse and inaccessible catalytic sites.

To reach the ideal optical band gap of about 2.3eV, A library of eight sulfur and nitrogen containing porous polymers (SNPs) with similar geometries but with optical band gaps ranging from 2.07 to 2.60eV was synthesized using Stille coupling. These polymers combine -conjugated electron-withdrawing triazine (C3N3) and electron donating, sulfur-containing moieties as covalently bonded donor-acceptor frameworks with permanent porosity.

The remarkable optical properties of SNPs enable fluorescence on-off sensing of volatile organic compounds and illustrate intrinsic charge-transfer effects.