[Composite Series 8] Redox-Active Functional Materials for New Applications Switchable, Addressable and Tuneable

author:系统管理员time:2018-07-18views:1187

Professor Charl F.J. Faul


Materials Chemistry

University of Bristol, UK


Time: 10:30 18th, July 2018

Address:Yuanwanglu, 7th floor, Cao Building

Inviter:Professor Huaxin Peng


Abstract

Use of synthetic organic approaches for the preparation of novel aniline-based materials allow us to exploit their tuneable conductive, redox and optical properties.  We have thus explored the use of such and related materials in two key areas:

Functional 1D Wires: We are exploiting this functional aniline-based platform to prepare novel redox-active cationic surfactants, and investigating their supramolecular organisation into self-assembled nanowires in solution, and actively tuning their packing parameter to address assembly in a reversible fashion. We are furthermore expanding our activities to the fabrication of novel OFET devices, thus continuing to explore structure-property-function relationships.

Functional 3D Materials: Applying these reactions for the formation of conjugated microporous polymers provided routes to efficient and highly selective and tunable CO2 capture, and energy storage. Using 2-photon polymerisation-based direct laser writing (DLW), finely controlled 3D-printed conjugated structures can be prepared to form actively tuneable photonic crystals.


BIOS

Charl F. J. Faul is Professor of Materials Chemistry and Director of Graduate Recruitment for the School of Chemistry, University of Bristol, UK. He received his PhD from the University of Stellenbosch, South Africa, in 2000. He is Adjunct Professor at the Department of Chemistry, Tsinghua University, Beijing, since November 2013. Prof. Faul is a synthetic materials chemist with a multidisciplinary international research group focussing on the design and synthesis of functional nanostructured materials. His activities range from fundamental to application-driven areas, where hierarchical and ionic self-assembly and the design and synthesis of electroactive nanomaterials are explored. Applications are actively pursued in the areas of energy and gas storage, and electroactive materials and devices (nanowire-based field-effect transistors, actuators for robotics, and 3D-printed addressable photonic structures).



InCSI Special Composites Seminar (No.8)



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