Standing Tall: Surface Decoupling of Fluorophores through 3D Molecular Constructs

  • Melina Vavali

Research output: ThesisThesis fully internal (DIV)

68 Downloads (Pure)

Abstract

Modern technologies, from solar cells to optical sensors, depend on ultra-thin layers that can conduct or emit light. Traditionally, these layers are made using top-down lithography, a precise but expensive and energy-intensive process. This research explored a greener, bottom-up alternative: using molecules that naturally organise themselves into ordered structures.
The study focuses on graphene, a single-atom thick form of carbon famous for its strength and conductivity. However, when light-emitting molecules (fluorophores) are placed directly on graphene, their glow disappears because of strong electronic interactions. To prevent this “quenching”, the project introduces specially designed three-dimensional molecular architectures that lift the light-emitting parts away from the graphene surface, electronically isolating them while keeping their structure stable.
These molecular assemblies are built like miniature scaffolds, combining three components: a pedestal (porphyrin or phthalocyanine), a fluorescent molecule, and a linker that connects the two. By fine-tuning these building blocks, the spacing and orientation of the light emitters can be precisely controlled.
Using advanced microscopy and spectroscopy techniques, the research demonstrated that this bottom-up design successfully preserves fluorescence – an important step toward fabricating more efficient, flexible, and eco-friendly photonic and optoelectronic devices.
Original languageEnglish
QualificationDoctor of Philosophy
Awarding Institution
  • University of Groningen
Supervisors/Advisors
  • Rudolf, Petra, Supervisor
  • Arfaoui, Imad, Supervisor
Award date16-Dec-2025
Place of Publication[Groningen]
Publisher
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2025

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