Nature uses organic molecules for light harvesting and photosynthesis but most man-made water splitting catalysts are inorganic semiconductors. Organic photocatalysts, while attractive because of their synthetic tunability, tend to have low quantum efficiencies for water splitting. Here we present a crystalline covalent organic framework (COF) based on a benzobis(benzothiophene sulfone) moiety that shows a much higher activity for photochemical hydrogen evolution than its amorphous or semi-crystalline counterparts. The COF is stable under long-term visible irradiation and shows steady photochemical hydrogen evolution with a sacrificial electron donor for at least fifty hours. We attribute its high quantum efficiency of FS-COF to its crystallinity, its strong visible light absorption, and its wettable, hydrophilic 3.2 nm mesopores. These pores allow the framework to be dye sensitized, leading to a further 61% enhancement in the hydrogen evolution rate up to 16.3 mmol g-1 h-1. The COF also retained its photocatalytic activity when cast as a thin film onto a support. Photocatalytic solar hydrogen production-or water splitting-offers an abundant clean energy source for the future. The use of dispersed, powdered photocatalysts or thin catalyst films is attractively simple, but so far, no catalyst satisfies the combined requirements of cost, stability and solar-to-hydrogen efficiency. Since the first report of TiO2 as a photocatalyst, 1 many inorganic semiconductors have been explored for water splitting, both in photoelectrochemical cells and as photocatalyst suspensions. 2-4 Recently, organic semiconductors have emerged as promising materials for photocatalytic hydrogen and oxygen evolution. 5-7 Poly(p-phenylene) was first reported as a photocatalyst for hydrogen evolution in 1985, 8,9 but its activity was poor and limited to the ultraviolet spectrum. Since then, more active organic materials have been reported as visible light photocatalysts for hydrogen production using sacrificial donors. This started with carbon nitrides 5,10 followed by poly(azomethine)s, 11 conjugated microporous polymers (CMPs), 6,12,13 linear conjugated polymers, 12,14-16 and covalent triazine-based frameworks (CTFs). 17-19 Carbon nitrides were further developed into hybrid systems that facilitate overall water splitting to produce both hydrogen and oxygen, for example by including metal co-catalysts. 20 CMPs were also claimed to exhibit overall photocatalytic water splitting. 21 However, while it is possible to tune semiconductor properties such as band gap by modular copolymerization strategies, 6 organic materials such as carbon nitrides, conjugated polymers and CTFs lack long-range order: they are amorphous or semi-crystalline. 17,22 This lack of order might limit the transport of photoactive charges to the catalyst surface. 23 More generally, it is challenging to construct atomistic structure-property relationships for materials where the three-dimensional architecture is poorly defined. Covalent organic frameworks (COFs) 24-26 are a cla...
The high performance and low cost of dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) have drawn great interest from both academic and industrial circles. The research on exploring novel efficient sensitizers, especially on inexpensive metal-free pure organic dyes, has never been suspended. The donor-π bridge-acceptor (D-π-A) configuration is mainstream in the design of organic sensitizers due to its convenient modulation of the intramolecular charge-transfer nature. Recently, it has been found that incorporation of additional electron-withdrawing units (such as benzothiadiazole, benzotriazole, quinoxaline, phthalimide, diketopyrrolopyrrole, thienopyrazine, thiazole, triazine, cyanovinyl, cyano- and fluoro-substituted phenyl) into the π bridge as internal acceptors, termed the D-A-π-A configuration, displays several advantages such as tuning of the molecular energy levels, red-shift of the charge-transfer absorption band, and distinct improvement of photovoltaic performance and stability. We apply the D-A-π-A concept broadly to the organic sensitizers containing additional electron-withdrawing units between electron donors and acceptors. This review is projected to summarize the category of pure organic sensitizers on the basis of the D-A-π-A feature. By comparing the structure-property relationship of typical photovoltaic D-A-π-A dyes, the important guidelines in the design of such materials are highlighted.
Recently, fluorescent or colorimetric chemosensors based on polymers have attracted great attention due to several important advantages, such as their simplicity of use, signal amplification, easy fabrication into devices, and combination of different outputs, etc. This tutorial review will cover polymer-based optical chemosensors from 2007 to 2010.
A novel concept "D-A-π -A" organic sensitizer instead of traditional D-π -A ones is proposed. Remarkably, the incorporated low bandgap, strong electronwithdrawing unit of benzothiadiazole shows several favorable characteristics in the areas of light-harvesting and effi ciency: i) optimized energy levels, resulting in a large responsive range of wavelengths into NIR region; ii) a very small blue-shift in the absorption peak on thin TiO 2 fi lms with respect to that in solution; iii) an improvement in the electron distribution of the donor unit to distinctly increase the photo-stability of synthetic intermediates and fi nal sensitizers. The stability and spectral response of indoline dye-based DSSCs are improved by the strong electron-withdrawing benzothiadizole unit in the conjugation bridge. The incident-photon-conversion effi ciency of WS-2 reaches nearly 850 nm with a power conversion effi ciency as high as 8.7% in liquid electrolyte and 6.6% in ionic-liquid electrolyte.
In vivo monitoring of the biodistribution and activation of prodrugs is urgently required. Near infrared (NIR) fluorescence-active fluorophores with excellent photostability are preferable for tracking drug release in vivo. Herein, we describe a NIR prodrug DCM-S-CPT and its polyethylene glycol-polylactic acid (PEG-PLA) loaded nanoparticles as a potent cancer therapy. We have conjugated a dicyanomethylene-4H-pyran derivative as the NIR fluorophore with camptothecin (CPT) as the anticancer drug using a disulfide linker. In vitro experiments verify that the high intracellular glutathione (GSH) concentrations in tumor cells cause cleavage of the disulfide linker, resulting in concomitantly the active drug CPT release and significant NIR fluorescence turn-on with large Stokes shift (200 nm). The NIR fluorescence of DCM-S-CPT at 665 nm with fast response to GSH can act as a direct off-on signal reporter for the GSH-activatable prodrug. Particularly, DCM-S-CPT possesses much better photostability than ICG, which is highly desirable for in situ fluorescence-tracking of cancer chemotherapy. DCM-S-CPT has been successfully utilized for in vivo and in situ tracking of drug release and cancer therapeutic efficacy in living animals by NIR fluorescence. DCM-S-CPT exhibits excellent tumor-activatable performance when intravenously injected into tumor-bearing nude mice, as well as specific cancer therapy with few side effects. DCM-S-CPT loaded in PEG-PLA nanoparticles shows even higher antitumor activity than free CPT, and is also retained longer in the plasma. The tumor-targeting ability and the specific drug release in tumors make DCM-S-CPT as a promising prodrug, providing significant advances toward deeper understanding and exploration of theranostic drug-delivery systems.
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