Co-reporter:Tse-Luen Wee ; Benjamin D. Sherman ; Devens Gust ; Ana L. Moore ; Thomas A. Moore ; Yun Liu ;Juan C. Scaiano
Journal of the American Chemical Society 2011 Volume 133(Issue 42) pp:16742-16745
Publication Date(Web):September 26, 2011
DOI:10.1021/ja206280g
New cobalt-based nanocomposites have been prepared by photoreduction of Co2+ salts to generate cobalt nanoparticles deposited on carbon-based materials such as nanocyrstalline diamond and carbon felt. Spontaneous air oxidation converts the metal to Co2O3 which has been tested as a water oxidation catalyst. This work demonstrates that the cobalt oxide nanostructures can be deposited on various carbon surfaces and can catalyze the four-electron oxidation of water to oxygen under anodic bias.
Co-reporter:Devens Gust, Thomas A. Moore, Ana L. Moore
Journal of Photochemistry and Photobiology B: Biology 2000 Volume 58(2–3) pp:63-71
Publication Date(Web):November 2000
DOI:10.1016/S1011-1344(00)00145-7
Fullerenes have been used successfully in the covalent assembly of supramolecular systems that mimic some of the electron transfer steps of photosynthetic reaction centers. In these constructs C60 is most often used as the primary electron acceptor; it is linked to cyclic tetrapyrroles or other chromophores which act as primary electron donors in photoinduced electron transfer processes. In artificial photosynthetic systems, fullerenes exhibit several differences from the superficially more biomimetic quinone electron acceptors. The lifetime of the initial charge-separated state in fullerene-based molecules is, in general, considerably longer than in comparable systems containing quinones. Moreover, photoinduced electron transfer processes take place in non-polar solvents and at low temperature in frozen glasses in a number of fullerene-based dyads and triads. These features are unusual in photosynthetic model systems that employ electron acceptors such as quinones, and are more reminiscent of electron transfer in natural reaction centers. This behavior can be attributed to a reduced sensitivity of the fullerene radical anion to solvent charge stabilization effects and small internal and solvent reorganization energies for electron transfer in the fullerene systems, relative to quinone-based systems.