Colorado State University NSF-REU Summer Program in Materials Chemistry Research:

Synthesis, Characterization, and Device Fabrication

C. Michael Elliott

For more information, visit our group webpage…

A general theme of the research program in the Elliott group is the interaction of light and mater at the molecular level and in materials.  Specific areas in which undergraduates participate are the synthesis and study of molecular assemblies designed to address problems in intramolecular electron and energy transfer. These studies include: (1) fundamental problems in electron transfer; and (2) assemblies designed to produce long-lived charge separated states upon photoexcitation.  Each problem requires different types of molecular systems.  When addressing fundamental questions, chemical systems should be structurally very well defined as donor/acceptor coupling depends on the number of parameters, including distance, orbital orientation, and bond connectivity.  Molecules designed to address point two should be flexible - a property that enables them to efficiently form the charge-separated state.  In each aspect, synthetic alterations are made in the structure (e.g., the length and chemical nature of the connecting bridges) that affect the various relevant parameters.  Related work on dye sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) probes light-induced charge separation between a dye molecule and a nanoscopic particle onto which it is adsorbed, focused on systems that mediate electron transfer across the cell from the dye-coated photo-anode to the cathode.  Certain cobalt complexes can be efficient electron-transport mediators in DSSCs.  Ligands bound to the cobalt are synthetically modify to change redox properties (e.g., fluorine for hydrogen substitution) and/or their steric requirements (e.g., bulky alkyl groups).  REU students will participate in synthesizing new ligands for preparing mediators.

Other Participating Mentors

Supported by

NSF-REU