RESUMO
A new porous organic polymer (CTF-CAR), which takes carbazole as the electron-rich center unit and thiophenes as the auxiliary group, has been synthesized through catalyst-free Schiff-base polymerization. At the same time, the structure, thermal stability, morphology, and other basic properties of the polymer were analyzed by IR, NMR, TGA, and SEM. Then, CTF-CAR was applied to iodine capture and rhodamine B adsorption. Due to its strong electron donor ability and abundant heteroatom binding sites, which have a positive effect on the interaction between the polymer network and adsorbates, CTF-CAR exhibits high uptake capacities for iodine vapor and rhodamine B as 2.86 g g-1 and 199.7 mg g-1, respectively. The recyclability test also confirmed that it has good reusability. We found that this low-cost and catalyst-free synthetic porous organic polymer has great potential for the treatment of polluted water and iodine capture.
RESUMO
A D-A-π-A dye (PTZ-5) has been synthesized by introducing a benzothiadiazole (BTD) unit as an auxiliary acceptor in a phenothiazine-based D-π-A dye(PTZ-3) to broaden its spectral response range and improve the device performance. Photophysical properties indicate that the inclusion of BTD in the PTZ-5 effectively red-shifted the absorption spectra by reducing the E gap. However, the device measurements show that the open-circuit voltage (V oc) of PTZ-5 cell (640 mV) is obviously lower than that of the PTZ-3 cell (710 mV). This results in a poor photoelectric conversion efficiency (PCE) (4.43%) compared to that of PTZ-3 cell (5.53%). Through further comparative analysis, we found that the introduction of BTD increases the dihedral angle between the D and A unit, which can reduce the efficiency of intramolecular charge transfer (ICT), lead to a less q CT and lower molar extinction coefficient of PTZ-5. In addition, the ESI test found that the lifetime of the electrons in the PTZ-5 cell is shorter. These are the main factors for the above unexpected result of PCE. Our studies bring new insights into the development of phenothiazine-based highly efficient dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs).