165.093 Molecule-based and self-assembled materials
This course is in all assigned curricula part of the STEOP.
This course is in at least 1 assigned curriculum part of the STEOP.

2020S, VO, 2.0h, 3.0EC
TUWEL

Properties

  • Semester hours: 2.0
  • Credits: 3.0
  • Type: VO Lecture

Learning outcomes

After successful completion of the course, students are able to...

- Explain the basic principles of supramolecular chemistry: molecular self-assembly, nature of supramolecular interactions, reversibility, error correction and addictiveness; as well its thermodynamic and kinetic aspects
- Exemplify the principles of molecular recognition (steric, structural and electronic complementarity) and pre-organization with examples of molecular systems (CD, CAL, DNA, crown ethers, cryptands and spherands) and apply them to predict simple molecular assemblies 
- Illustrate how basic principles of supramolecular chemistry can be extended to larger systems (molecular machines, micelles, liquid crystals, BCP, nanocarbons, nanoparticles). Explain what those systems are and give examples of their applications
- Compare and categorize light-to-matter interactions in molecules and materials
- Explain and compare basic principles behind solar cells, photocatalysis and light-emitting diodes; describe state-of-the-art of these fields and explain limitations of various material classes

Subject of course

The first part of this Lecture will introduce the concept of molecular recognition, overview major forces of molecular self-assembly and cover several important historical milestones of the field such as the recent Nobel Prize in Chemistry 2016. We will cover many textbook examples of self-assembled systems including molecular (crown ethers, cyclodextrine and calixarenes)  as well as biological (proteins, DNA) systems and slowly go up in complexity. Following examples will present self-assembled systems of various dimentionalities: 0D (micelles, fullerenes), 1D (carbon nanotubes), 2D (self-assembled monolayers, Langmuir-Blodgett films, graphene) and 3D (block copolymers, liquid crystals). We will spend much time trying to classify and sort out non-covalent interactions (e.g. van der Waals forces) that are very imporant in the world of molecular self-assembly. At the end of this first part, we will look at the self-assembly of inorganic nanoparticles and talk about metal organic frameworks. The course will introduce you to a number of practical examples where molecular self-assembly made it way to applications and devices.

The second part of the Lecture will introduce you to various photoactive materials such as photovoltaics (PV), light emitting diodes (LED), lasers, photocatalysts and phosphors. The aim is to develop your understanding of the materials design and materials requirements for each of these applications.  We will start by discussing the nature of the light-to-matter interactions and sort out the concepts or color, transparency and opaqueness, absorption and reflectance, refraction and birefringence to understand the principles and limitations of various photoactive materials. We will further link this knowledge with the band theory of solid state materials and review the concept of metals, semiconductors and insulators. Particular focus will be devoted to history, basic principles, materials, limitations and perspectives of solar cells, photocatalysis and light emitting diodes. 

Teaching methods

In addition to the traditional lecturing style, this course offers open discussions on literature examples, individual and group work, Still-got-it-Card technique as an opportunity to summarize the lecture content and will be supported by video content and demonstrations. Individual feedbacks with open questions will be collected after some lectures to be clarified at the beginning of the next lecture.

Mode of examination

Oral

Additional information

Preliminary discussion on 03.03.2020 | 10:00 | Seminarraum BC Lehar 02

Come to find out more about the course content and make a decision of whether to participate or not

Attendance of the lectures is a prerequisite for successful completion of the course.

! For data protection purposes we can only respond to enquiries sent from an official TU (student) e-mail address !

 

 

Lecturers

Institute

Course dates

DayTimeDateLocationDescription
Tue10:00 - 12:0003.03.2020 - 10.03.2020Seminarraum Lehar 02 Lecture
Fri10:00 - 12:0006.03.2020Seminarraum Lehar 02 Vorlesung
Fri10:00 - 12:0013.03.2020Seminarraum Lehar 02 Lecture
Molecule-based and self-assembled materials - Single appointments
DayDateTimeLocationDescription
Tue03.03.202010:00 - 12:00Seminarraum Lehar 02 Lecture
Fri06.03.202010:00 - 12:00Seminarraum Lehar 02 Vorlesung
Tue10.03.202010:00 - 12:00Seminarraum Lehar 02 Lecture
Fri13.03.202010:00 - 12:00Seminarraum Lehar 02 Lecture

Examination modalities

Evaluation will be based on the results of the oral examination (30 min per person), where the students need to answer three random questions from the lecture content. The pool of all questions will be provided in advance.

Course registration

Begin End Deregistration end
19.01.2020 00:00 09.03.2020 12:00

Registration modalities

Preliminary discussion:

Tuesday 03.03.2020 at 10 AM; Seminar room; Lehartrakt 2nd floor

 

Please register for the course if you are interested to attend.

Curricula

Literature

No lecture notes are available.

Miscellaneous

  • Attendance Required!

Language

English