| Literature DB >> 28757968 |
Moinul H Choudhury1, Simone Ciampi1, Ying Yang1, Roya Tavallaie1,2,3, Ying Zhu1, Leila Zarei1, Vinicius R Gonçales1, J Justin Gooding1,2,3.
Abstract
The requirement of a wire to each electrode is central to the deEntities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 28757968 PMCID: PMC5508692 DOI: 10.1039/c5sc03011k
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Schematics illustrating the concept of light activated electrochemistry and the general principle. (a) Shows the surface chemistry employed and a graphic suggesting electron transfer will only occur at a monolithic silicon surface where illuminated. (b) A diagram showing the working principles of how electrochemistry can be modulated on and off at a monolayer modified silicon surface using light. The semiconducting electrode is biased into depletion and the formation of space charge layer (SCL) impede electron transfer across the dark interface to insufficient charge carriers in this region. Illumination of the silicon results in an increase in charge carriers that allows appreciable electron transfer through the monolayer. The surface chemistry protects the non-oxide semiconductor from anodic degradation and allows electrochemistry with flowing currents to proceed only at the site of illumination.
Fig. 3Direct measurements of the size of a 2D surface redox feature through a single peripheral connection. (a) A schematic of the experimental design where a travelling, collimated focused light beam (∼80 μm FWHM, λ = 642 nm, optical power is 0.1 mW, Fig. S4 in ESI‡) moves along the x-direction to illuminate the backside of a macroscopic n-type silicon electrode. On the upper side is exposed to 1 mM [Fe(CN)6]4–/100 mM KNO3 electrolyte solution and contains a patterned ferrocene feature (blue area) of known width. The faradaic current is recorded as a function of the light pointer position. (b) Current measurements for electroactive features on a monolithic electrode of 300 μm, 200 μm, 80 μm, 50 μm, 30 μm and 15 μm width. The minimal lateral spacing of adjacent features that can be resolved is close to the substrate thickness. Note that the adsorption depth for red radiation in silicon is <4 μm, and the substrate thickness is 55 ± 6 μm.
Fig. 2(a) A cyclic voltammogram (CV) (dash black line) in aqueous 1.0 M HClO4 at highly doped (<0.007 Ω cm, dopant concentration, N A, >8 × 1018 cm–3) p-Si electrodes that behave electrochemically similar to metals. A CV of a poorly doped n-Si electrode (8–12 Ω cm, N D, ∼4.5 × 1014 cm–3) in the dark (solid black line) and light (solid red line) at 642 nm, ∼300 mW cm–2. (b) CVs (dash black line) at highly doped p-Si electrodes (<0.003 Ω cm, dopant concentration, N A ∼ 1 × 1019 cm–3) and poorly doped p-Si electrode (substrate: 1–10 Ω cm, N A, ∼8 × 1014 cm–3; illumination: 642 nm, ∼300 mW cm–2) to a surface bound anthraquinone at pH 10.1 in the dark (solid blue line) and light (solid red line). (c) Amperometric trace demonstrating the switching on and off of heterogeneous catalysis promoted by surface-bound ferrocene from an n-Si electrode to an aqueous ferrocyanide solution. The n-Si electrode is posed at +0.2 V versus Ag|AgCl| 3 M NaCl and 1 mM ferrocyanide [Fe(CN)6]4– in solution recycles the ferricinium back to ferrocene with modulation of the illumination (0.1 M KNO3 at pH 7; substrate: 8–12 Ω cm; illumination: 527 nm, ∼1.77 mW cm–2, modulation is 200 s ON and 200 s OFF).
Fig. 4A demonstration of mask-free electrochemical writing: light-driven growth of conductive features on an insulating substrate. (a) Microscopy image of a “cartoon face”, achieved by light-assisted mask-free electrochemical growth of a conductive polypyrrole pattern on a n-type Si(100) electrode by scanning light at the back-side. (b) Optical microscopy and FT-IR absorption microscopy images of polypyrrole features electrodeposited at x- and y-distance intervals of 500 μm. Characteristics FT-IR bands confirm the chemistry and spatial arrangement of the polymer dots (1030 cm–1, C–H ring out-of-plane bending, C–C inter-ring out-of-plane bending, N–H ring out-of-plane bending; 1160 cm–1).
Fig. 5A demonstration that electrochemical information can be read from an array of DNA spots simply by scanning a light pointer across the surface. (a) Schematic of a chemically-modified p-type Si(100) photocathode device for spatially-resolved detection of DNA hybridization. Whether hybridization of target ssDNA in solution with surface-bound probe ssDNA occurs is determined by scanning the light source across the surface. If a duplex is formed, the redox species anthraquinone-2-sulfonic (AQMS) acid intercalates into the duplex and long range charge transfer can occur. The AQMS is recycled by dissolved oxygen in the buffer. (b) Electrochemical response of the modified silicon electrode poised at –0.55 V versus Ag|AgCl| 3 M NaCl as a function of the position of the light source across a four element array. At each position, a ssDNA probe sequence on the surface was exposed to target DNA that is complementary, possessing a single C–A base-pair mismatch, noncomplementary and complementary again to the surface probe. The solution contained 20 μM target DNA, 25 μM AQMS, 0.05 M phosphate buffer in 0.2 M NaCl.