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1.
Nat Commun ; 15(1): 3072, 2024 Apr 09.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38594293

RESUMO

Engineering asymmetric transmission between left-handed and right-handed circularly polarized light in planar Fabry-Pérot (FP) microcavities would enable a variety of chiral light-matter phenomena, with applications in spintronics, polaritonics, and chiral lasing. Such symmetry breaking, however, generally requires Faraday rotators or nanofabricated polarization-preserving mirrors. We present a simple solution requiring no nanofabrication to induce asymmetric transmission in FP microcavities, preserving low mode volumes by embedding organic thin films exhibiting apparent circular dichroism (ACD); an optical phenomenon based on 2D chirality. Importantly, ACD interactions are opposite for counter-propagating light. Consequently, we demonstrated asymmetric transmission of cavity modes over an order of magnitude larger than that of the isolated thin film. Through circular dichroism spectroscopy, Mueller matrix ellipsometry, and simulation using theoretical scattering matrix methods, we characterize the spatial, spectral, and angular chiroptical responses of this 2D chiral microcavity.

2.
Chem Sci ; 11(10): 2647-2656, 2020 Feb 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34084323

RESUMO

The ability to optically monitor a chemical reaction and generate an in situ readout is an important enabling technology, with applications ranging from the monitoring of reactions in flow, to the critical assessment step for combinatorial screening, to mechanistic studies on single reactant and catalyst molecules. Ideally, such a method would be applicable to many polymers and not require only a specific monomer for readout. It should also be applicable if the reactions are carried out in microdroplet chemical reactors, which offer a route to massive scalability in combinatorial searches. We describe a convenient optical method for monitoring polymerization reactions, fluorescence polarization anisotropy monitoring, and show that it can be applied in a robotically generated microdroplet. Further, we compare our method to an established optical reaction monitoring scheme, the use of Aggregation-Induced Emission (AIE) dyes, and find the two monitoring schemes offer sensitivity to different temporal regimes of the polymerization, meaning that the combination of the two provides an increased temporal dynamic range. Anisotropy is sensitive at early times, suggesting it will be useful for detecting new polymerization "hits" in searches for new reactivity, while the AIE dye responds at longer times, suggesting it will be useful for detecting reactions capable of reaching higher molecular weights.

3.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 21(4): 1689-1699, 2019 Jan 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30260357

RESUMO

This study examined the solution-phase exchange reactions of triphenylphosphine (PPh3) ligands on Au8L72+ (L = PPh3) gold clusters with three different tolyl ligands using electrospray ionization mass spectrometry to provide insight into how steric differences in the phosphines influence the extent of ligand exchange and the stability of the resulting mixed-phosphine clusters. The size distributions of tolyl-exchanged gold clusters were found to depend on the position of the methyl group in the tri(tolyl)phosphine ligands (-ortho, -meta, and -para). Due to different sterics, the tri(m-tolyl)phosphine (TMTP) and tri(p-tolyl)phosphine (TPTP) ligands exchanged efficiently onto the Au8L72+ (L = PPh3) clusters while the tri(o-tolyl)phosphine ligands did not exchange. In addition, while TPTP fully exchanged with all seven PPh3 on the Au8L72+ cluster, TMTP exchanged with only six PPh3 ligands. Employing collision-induced dissociation, the tolyl-exchanged mixed-ligand clusters were demonstrated to fragment through loss of neutral ligands and AuL2+. Comparison of the relative fragmentation yields of PPh3vs. TMTP and TPTP from the mixed-ligand clusters indicated that these tolyl ligands are more strongly bonded to the Au82+ gold core than PPh3. To provide molecular-level insight into the experimental results we also performed complementary electronic structure calculations using density functional theory at the B3LYP-D3/SDD level of theory on representative model systems. These computations revealed that steric interactions of the CH3 group on the tri(o-tolyl)phosphine ligand are responsible for the lack of ligand exchange in solution with PPh3. Our joint experimental and theoretical findings demonstrate the subtle interplay of steric and electronic factors that determine the size distribution, stability, and dissociation pathways of phosphine ligated gold clusters.

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