4.6 Article

Photoactive Surface-Grafted Polymer Brushes with Phthalocyanine Bridging Groups as an Advanced Architecture for Light-Harvesting

Journal

CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Volume 23, Issue 47, Pages 11239-11243

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/chem.201702737

Keywords

click chemistry; photoactive films; phthalocyanines; polymer brushes; polymerization

Funding

  1. National Science Center (NCN) [2013/11/D/ST5/02898]
  2. NCN in Fuga2 [2013/08/S/ST5/00565]
  3. NCN [2011/03/D/ST5/05910]
  4. Foundation for Polish Science - European Union under the European Regional Development Fund [TEAM/2016-1/9]
  5. European Regional Development Fund [POIG.02.01.00-12-023/08]

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Surface-grafted polymer brushes of novel ladder-like architecture were proposed for inducing ordering of chromophores embedded therein. The brushes with acetylene side groups were obtained by surface-initiated photoiniferter-mediated polymerization. The acetylene moieties reacted then through a click process with an axially azide-bifunctionalized silicon phthalocyanine bridging the neighboring chains that inherently adopt extended conformations in dense brushes. FTIR, quartz crystal microbalance, and atomic force microscopy were used to study formation and structure of the photoactive brushes varying in grafting densities. Importantly, photophysical properties of the chromophores were virtually unaffected upon embedding them into the brushes, as evidenced by UV/Vis absorption and emission spectroscopy. Owing to the unique ordering of the chromophores, the proposed method may open new opportunities for the fabrication of light-harvesting systems suitable for photovoltaic or sensing applications.

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