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Solar energy is a promising alternative for addressing the world's current and future energy requirements in a sustainable way. Because solar irradiation is intermittent, it is necessary to store this energy in the form of a fuel so it can be used when required. The light-driven splitting of water into

Solar energy is a promising alternative for addressing the world's current and future energy requirements in a sustainable way. Because solar irradiation is intermittent, it is necessary to store this energy in the form of a fuel so it can be used when required. The light-driven splitting of water into oxygen and hydrogen (a useful chemical fuel) is a fascinating theoretical and experimental challenge that is worth pursuing because the advance of the knowledge that it implies and the availability of water and sunlight. Inspired by natural photosynthesis and building on previous work from our laboratory, this dissertation focuses on the development of water-splitting dye-sensitized photoelectrochemical tandem cells (WSDSPETCs). The design, synthesis, and characterization of high-potential porphyrins and metal-free phthalocyanines with phosphonic anchoring groups are reported. Photocurrents measured for WSDSPETCs made with some of these dyes co-adsorbed with molecular or colloidal catalysts on TiO2 electrodes are reported as well. To guide in the design of new molecules we have used computational quantum chemistry extensively. Linear correlations between calculated frontier molecular orbital energies and redox potentials were built and tested at multiple levels of theory (from semi-empirical methods to density functional theory). Strong correlations (with r2 values > 0.99) with very good predictive abilities (rmsd < 50 mV) were found when using density functional theory (DFT) combined with a continuum solvent model. DFT was also used to aid in the elucidation of the mechanism of the thermal relaxation observed for the charge-separated state of a molecular triad that mimics the photo-induced proton coupled electron transfer of the tyrosine-histidine redox relay in the reaction center of Photosystem II. It was found that the inclusion of explicit solvent molecules, hydrogen bonded to specific sites within the molecular triad, was essential to explain the observed thermal relaxation. These results are relevant for both advancing the knowledge about natural photosynthesis and for the future design of new molecules for WSDSPETCs.
ContributorsMéndez-Hernández, Dalvin D (Author) / Moore, Ana L (Thesis advisor) / Mujica, Vladimiro (Thesis advisor) / Gust, Devens J. (Committee member) / Gould, Ian (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2014
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Description
Molecular dynamics simulations were used to study properties of water at the interface with nanometer-size solutes. We simulated nonpolar attractive Kihara cavities given by a Lennard-Jones potential shifted by a core radius. The dipolar response of the hydration layer to a uniform electric field substantially exceeds that of the bulk.

Molecular dynamics simulations were used to study properties of water at the interface with nanometer-size solutes. We simulated nonpolar attractive Kihara cavities given by a Lennard-Jones potential shifted by a core radius. The dipolar response of the hydration layer to a uniform electric field substantially exceeds that of the bulk. For strongly attractive solutes, the collective dynamics of the hydration layer become slow compared to bulk water, as the solute size is increased. The statistics of electric field fluctuations at the solute center are Gaussian and tend toward the dielectric continuum limit with increasing solute size. A dipolar probe placed at the center of the solute is sensitive neither to the polarity excess nor to the slowed dynamics of the hydration layer. A point dipole was introduced close to the solute-water interface to further study the statistics of electric field fluctuations generated by the water. For small dipole magnitudes, the free energy surface is single-welled, with approximately Gaussian statistics. When the dipole is increased, the free energy surface becomes double-welled, before landing in an excited state, characterized again by a single-welled surface. The intermediate region is fairly broad and is characterized by electrostatic fluctuations significantly in excess of the prediction of linear response. We simulated a solute having the geometry of C180 fullerene, with dipoles introduced on each carbon. For small dipole moments, the solvent response follows the results seen for a single dipole; but for larger dipole magnitudes, the fluctuations of the solute-solvent energy pass through a second maximum. The juxtaposition of the two transitions leads to an approximately cubic scaling of the chemical potential with the dipole strengh. Umbrella sampling techniques were used to generate free energy surfaces of the electric potential fluctuations at the heme iron in Cytochrome B562. The results were unfortunately inconclusive, as the ionic background was not effectively represented in the finite-size system.
ContributorsFriesen, Allan Dwayne (Author) / Matyushov, Dmitry V (Thesis advisor) / Angell, C Austen (Thesis advisor) / Beckstein, Oliver (Committee member) / Mujica, Vladimiro (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2012
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Description
Waste heat energy conversion remains an inviting subject for research, given the renewed emphasis on energy efficiency and carbon emissions reduction. Solid-state thermoelectric devices have been widely investigated, but their practical application remains challenging because of cost and the inability to fabricate them in geometries that are easily compatible

Waste heat energy conversion remains an inviting subject for research, given the renewed emphasis on energy efficiency and carbon emissions reduction. Solid-state thermoelectric devices have been widely investigated, but their practical application remains challenging because of cost and the inability to fabricate them in geometries that are easily compatible with heat sources. An intriguing alternative to solid-state thermoelectric devices is thermogalvanic cells, which include a generally liquid electrolyte that permits the transport of ions. Thermogalvanic cells have long been known in the electrochemistry community, but have not received much attention from the thermal transport community. This is surprising given that their performance is highly dependent on controlling both thermal and mass (ionic) transport. This research will focus on a research project, which is an interdisciplinary collaboration between mechanical engineering (i.e. thermal transport) and chemistry, and is a largely experimental effort aimed at improving fundamental understanding of thermogalvanic systems. The first part will discuss how a simple utilization of natural convection within the cell doubles the maximum power output of the cell. In the second part of the research, some of the results from the previous part will be applied in a feasibility study of incorporating thermogalvanic waste heat recovery systems into automobiles. Finally, a new approach to enhance Seebeck coefficient by tuning the configurational entropy of a mixed-ligand complex formation of copper sulfate aqueous electrolytes will be presented. Ultimately, a summary of these results as well as possible future work that can be formed from these efforts is discussed.
ContributorsGunawan, Andrey (Author) / Phelan, Patrick E (Thesis advisor) / Buttry, Daniel A (Committee member) / Mujica, Vladimiro (Committee member) / Chan, Candace K. (Committee member) / Wang, Robert Y (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2015