John Asbury

Professor of Chemistry and Associate Department Head for Graduate Education
john asbury

asbury

Professional Appointments and Affiliations

Professor of Chemistry

Associate Department Head for Graduate Education

Office 

112 Chemistry Building
University Park, PA 16802
Email: jasbury@psu.edu 
(814) 863-6309

Education

B.S., University of Tennessee, Knoxville, 1996

Ph.D. Emory University, 2001

Post-doc, Stanford University, 2005

Honors and Awards

DOE CAREER Award (2012)

NSF CAREER Award (2009)

3M Non-Tenured Faculty Grant (2008, 2009)

Eli Lilly Analytical Chemistry New Faculty Award (2007)

Camille and Henry Dreyfus New Faculty Award (2005)

Research

We are an ultrafast spectroscopy group specializing in the development and application of two-dimensional infrared (2D IR) spectroscopy to study chemical processes in functional organic electronic materials. Ultrafast infrared spectroscopy is combined with electrochemical techniques to elucidate the structure and dynamics of charged defects and their involvement in electron transfer, charge carrier diffusion, and bimolecular charge recombination in emerging photovoltaic materials. Ultrafast and microsecond time scale infrared methods are also utilized to study the influence of the dielectric properties of materials on bimolecular charge recombination and charge transport processes.

Defects in Organic Electronics

The modern electronic age was facilitated by the ability to control defects in silicon, which enabled the transport and recombination behavior of charge carriers to be tuned. Emerging applications in inexpensive photovoltaics, lighting and display technologies call for flexible electronic materials for which the rigidity of silicon is not well suited. Organic electronics promise to fill this niche – but only if defects in these materials can be similarly controlled. To date, clear pathways to develop control strategies have not emerged because few techniques exist that can examine defects in organic materials with structural specificity.

The principle objective of Professor Asbury’s research program is to explicate the mechanisms by which the molecular structures of defects in organic electronic materials determine their charge transport, trapping, and recombination characteristics. We do this by combining multi-dimensional spectroscopy with electrochemistry. Our research is guided by the hypothesis that the molecular vibrations of organic electronic materials, whose frequency and dynamics depend sensitively on their structures, can be used to examine the structures of charged defects through their vibrational spectra.

2D IR Spectroelectrochemistry

The essential elements of the 2D IR spectroelectrochemical technique are highlighted in Fig. 1. Charged defects are populated by shifting the Fermi energy of the material with an applied potential, V (step 1). One of the electrodes is transparent in the infrared allowing one- and two-dimensional spectra of the defect vibrations to be recorded (step 2). The vibrational dynamics and two-dimensional line shapes of charged defects are compared to the corresponding features of the neutral materials for which structural assignments are known. In this way, the vibrational assignments of the pristine materials can be mapped directly onto the vibrational features of the defects – thus facilitating their structural elucidation.

Figure 1

Fig 1 - Asbury

Figure 1. Scheme outlining the essential elements of the 2D IR spectroelectrochemical method. Charge defects are populated by applying a voltage to the electrochemical cell. The corresponding changes of the 1D and 2D IR spectra provide a means to elucidate the structures of the charged defects.

The Asbury group uses the 2D IR spectroelectrochemical methods to examine defects in a variety of emerging organic photovoltaic materials including those depicted in Figs. 2 and 3. The efficiencies of many organic solar cells based on polymeric materials (Fig. 2A) are reduced by bimolecular charge recombination (Fig. 2B, step 1) because this process occurs on a similar time scale as charge percolation to the electrodes to make photocurrent (Fig. 2B, step 2). We examine a variety of polymeric materials to understand how the molecular structures and morphologies of the polymer blends influence the charge carrier dynamics and defect structures.

 

Figure 2

Figure 2. Examples of electron donating polymers and electron accepting molecules in which charged defects are examined in organic photovoltaic materials.

Solar Cells composed of colloidal quantum dots (CQD) such as CdSe, CdTe, PbS, or PbSe (Fig. 3) may enable the absorption spectrum of inexpensive photovoltaic materials to be extended into the near- and mid-IR spectral regions to fully utilize the solar spectrum for electrical power generation. The efficiencies of these devices are limited by the presence of charged defects at the quantum dot – ligand (L) interfaces which decrease the photovoltage and photocurrent of the devices. We examine a variety of ligands to understand how their molecular structures and surface chemistry influence the type and density of defects.

Figure 3

Figure 3. Schematic diagram of a colloidal quantum dot (CQD) solar cell. The quantum dots are covered by a monolayer of ligands (L). Defects at the quantum dot – ligand interfaces reduce the efficiency of CQD solar cells.

A variety of vibrational modes are used to probe structures in the materials including C-H, C=O, CºN, C=N, O-H, N-H, S-H, and P=O stretch and bend modes with vibrational frequencies ranging from 3000 cm-1 to 1000 cm-1.

The approach of the Asbury group is very interdisciplinary and includes collaboration with groups in various engineering fields as well as within the Chemistry department. The general areas of chemical study include physical, analytical, physical organic and materials/ polymer chemistry.

Selected Publications

“Electron-Phonon Coupling and Resonant Relaxation from 1D and 1P States in PbS Quantum Dots,” Eric R. Kennehan, Grayson S. Doucette, Ashley R. Marshall, Christopher Grieco, Kyle T. Munson. Matthew C. Beard, and John B. Asbury, ACS Nano12, 6263-6272 (2018).

“Direct Observation of Correlated Triplet Pair Dynamics during Singlet Fission Using Ultrafast Mid-IR Spectroscopy,” Christopher Grieco, Eric R. Kennehan, Hwon Kim, Ryan D. Pensack, Alyssa N. Brigeman, Adam Rimshaw, Marcia M. Payne, John E. Anthony, Noel C. Giebink, Gregory D. Scholes, and John B. Asbury, J. Phys. Chem. C122, 2012-2022 (2018).

“Triplet Transfer Mediates Triplet Pair Separation During Singlet Fission in TIPS-Pentacene,” Christopher Grieco, Grayson S. Doucette, Jason M. Munro, Eric R. Kennehan, Youngmin Lee, Adam Rimshaw, Marcia M. Payne, Nichole Wonderling, John E. Anthony, Ismaila Dabo, Enrique D. Gomez and John B. Asbury, Adv. Funct. Mater., 27, 1703929 (2017).

“Harnessing Molecular Vibrations to Probe Triplet Dynamics During Singlet Fission,” Christopher Grieco, Eric R. Kennehan, Adam Rimshaw, Marcia M. Payne, John E. Anthony, John B. Asbury, J. Phys. Chem. Lett., 8, 5700-5706 (2017).

“Using Molecular Vibrations to Probe Exciton Delocalization in Films of Perylene Diimides with Ultrafast Mid-IR Spectroscopy,” Eric R. Kennehan, Christopher Grieco, Alyssa N. Brigeman, Grayson S. Doucette, Adam Rimshaw, Kayla Bisgaier, Noel C. Giebink, and John B. Asbury, Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys., 19, 24829-24839 (2017).

“Time-Resolved Infrared Spectroscopy Directly Probes Free and Trapped Carriers in Organo-Halide Perovskites,” Kyle T. Munson, Christopher Grieco, Eric R. Kennehan, Robert J. Stewart, and John B. Asbury, ACS Energy Lett., 2, 651-658 (2017).

“Dynamic Exchange During Triplet Transport in Nanocrystalline TIPS-Pentacene Films,” Christopher Grieco, Grayson S. Doucette, Ryan D. Pensack, Marcia M. Payne, Adam Rimshaw, Gregory D. Scholes, John E. Anthony and John B. Asbury, J. Am. Chem. Soc., 138, 16069-16080 (2016).

“Molecular Rectification in Block Copolymer Photovoltaics,” Christopher Grieco, Melissa P. Aplan, Adam Rimshaw, Youngmin Lee, Thinh P. Le, Wenlin Zhang, Qing Wang, Scott T. Milner, Enrique D. Gomez and John B. Asbury, J. Phys. Chem. C., 120, 6978-6988 (2016).

“Influence of Acceptor Structure on Barriers to Charge Separation in Organic Photovoltaic Materials,” Ryan D. Pensack, Changhe Guo, Kiarash Vakhshouri, Enrique D. Gomez, and John B. Asbury, J. Phys. Chem. C., 116, 4824-4831 (2012). DOI:10.1021/jp2083133.

“Enhanced Mobility-Lifetime Products in PbS Colloidal Quantum Dot Photovoltaics,” Kwang S. Jeong, Jiang Tang,Huan Liu,,Jihye Kim, Andrew W. Schaefer, Kyle Kemp, Larissa Levina, Xihua Wang, Sjoerd Hoogland, Ratan Debnath, Lukasz Brzozowski, Edward H. Sargent, and John B. Asbury, ACS Nano6, 89-99 (2012). DOI:10.1021/nn2039164.

“Colloidal Quantum Dot Photovoltaics Using Atomic Ligand Passivation,” Jiang Tang, Kyle M. Kemp, Sjoerd Hoogland, Kwang S. Jeong, Huan Liu, Larissa Levina, Melissa Furukawa, Xihua Wang, Ratan Debnath, Dongkyu Cha, Kang Wei Chou, Armin Fischer, Aram Amassian, John B. Asbury, Edward H. Sargent, Nature Materials10, 765-771 (2011). DOI:10.1038/NMAT3118.

“Ultrafast Probes of Charge Transfer States in Organic Photovoltaic Materials,” Ryan D. Pensack and John B. Asbury, Chem. Phys. Lett515, 197-205 (2011). DOI:10.1016/j.cplett.2011.07.002.