Pritchard, Dylan (2020) Immobilised Transition Metal Photosensitisers: Robust, Sustainable, Solar-Driven Systems for Water Purification. PhD thesis, University of Sheffield.
Abstract
The aim of this work is to produce a point-of-use water disinfecting technology that harnesses
the power of sunlight to disinfect water through generation of singlet oxygen by metal
complex photosensitisers attached to solid supports. To that end a number of Ru(II) and Cu(I)
complex photosensitisers based on bipyridyl-type ligands have been synthesised and
immobilised onto various supports. The compounds were tested with regards to their singlet
oxygen generating abilities and bactericidal efficiencies against Staphylococcus aureus and
Escherichia coli.
Chapter 1 contains an introduction to the topic of singlet oxygen photosensitisation,
photodynamic inactivation of bacteria, and a literature survey of the field of solar purification
of water using supported singlet oxygen photosensitisers.
Chapter 2 discusses the main synthetic work: synthesis of a wide range of Ru(II) and Cu(I)
complexes with polypyridyl ligands, followed by spectroscopic characterisation using UV-Vis,
steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. The complexes’ immobilisation
onto solid supports is described and the resulting immobilised compounds were also
characterised using UV-Vis, Infrared and fluorescence spectroscopy. The ruthenium complex
[Ru(bpy)2(bpy-silatrane)]Cl2 (RuBS) was synthesised and covalently grafted onto
chromatography silica (40-60 mesh), SBA-15 and MCM-41 with surface coverages of 38, 50
and >80 µmol g-1 respectively. A number of other Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes were
synthesised with the aim of improving singlet oxygen quantum yield. Tetrasodium Ruthenium
tris(bathophenantholine disulfonate) (RuBPS) was ionically bound onto the surface of
Amberlite® IRA900 with a surface loading of 1.20 µmol g-1. To PDMS were covalently grafted
two Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes. This was performed by two methods: amination with 3-ii
amino(propyl triethoxysilane) (APTES) and 3-mercapto(propyl trimethoxysilane) (MPTS). A
number of Cu(I) diamine diphosphine complexes ({Cu(NN)(PP)}+) were also synthesised with
optimisation of singlet oxygen quantum yield and absorption in the visible spectrum being
evaluated. Of all of the synthesised complexes the known compound [Cu(2,9-dimethyl-1,10-
phenanthroline)(xantphos)]tfpb was dry-loaded onto chromatography grade silica to produce
the compound CuXD-CS, with surface loading of 11 µmol g-1 of the active complex.
Chapter 3 describes the quantification of singlet oxygen production by the synthesised
compound, both in solution and when grafted onto solid supports. The singlet oxygen
quantum yields of the following Ru(II) complexes was measured: RuBS (ΦΔ= 0.55 ±0.03),
RuBMS (ΦΔ= 0.60 ±0.04) and RuPS (ΦΔ= 0.88 ±0.03); along with the Cu(I) complexes
{Cu(dmp)(xant)}+ (ΦΔ= 0.30 ±0.04), {Cu(BC)(xant)}+ (ΦΔ= 0.41 ±0.03), {Cu(BCS)(xant)}+ (ΦΔ=
0.42 ±0.08), {Cu(dmp)(DPEPhos)}+ (ΦΔ= 0.40 ±0.09).
In Chapter 4 the singlet-oxygen based bactericidal activity of two of the solid supportimmobilised complexes was tested on S. aureus and E. coli with varying degrees of success
following an introduction into the cell wall structure of Gram-positive and Gram-negative
bacteria. RuBS covalently grafted onto chromatography silica (RuBS-CS) was unable to reduce
colonies of S. aureus and E. coli after 2 hours of illumination by 455 nm light (2.5 mWcm-2).
The complex [Cu(2,9-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline)(xantphos)]tfpb also showed no
photodynamic bactericidal activity on its own. However, the same Cu(I) complex dry-loaded
onto chromatography silica, CuXD-CS, reduced colonies of S. aureus and E. coli by 99.9999%
(6-log10) after 2 and 3 hours of illumination by 405 nm light (14.3 mW cm-2) respectively.
Chapter 5 includes all synthesis and characterisation data of the complexes presented in this
work.
Metadata
Supervisors: | Ward, Mike and Weinstein, Julia |
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Keywords: | Inorganic Synthesis, Photosensitiser, Photosensitizer, Solar water disinfection, SODIS, PACT, Ruthenium, Copper, Transition metal, |
Awarding institution: | University of Sheffield |
Academic Units: | The University of Sheffield > Faculty of Science (Sheffield) > Chemistry (Sheffield) The University of Sheffield > Faculty of Science (Sheffield) |
Depositing User: | Mr Dylan Pritchard |
Date Deposited: | 12 Oct 2020 16:33 |
Last Modified: | 12 Oct 2020 16:33 |
Open Archives Initiative ID (OAI ID): | oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:27846 |
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