Oct. 4: "Non-Equilibrium Assembly of Functional Polymers for Sustainable Earth and Habitable Mars"
Date: Wednesday, October 4, 2023
 
Time: 9:30-10:30AM
 
Location: Health Science Technology Building (HST), Forum Room 101
 
This event features Ying Diao, who will talk about "Non-Equilibrium Assembly of Functional Polymers for Sustainable Earth and Habitable Mars", as part of the Lehigh University Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering's Fall 2023 Colloquium Seminar Series.
 

Abstract

Printing technologies have the potential to revolutionize manufacturing of electronic and energy materials by drastically reducing the energy cost and environmental footprint while increasing throughput and agility. For instance, printing organic solar cells can potentially reduce energy payback time from 2-3 years to as short as 1 day! At the same time, additive manufacturing of such functional materials brings a new set of challenges demanding exquisite control over hierarchical structures down to the molecular-scale. We address this challenge by designing interfaces and fluid flow central to all printing processes. This approach is demonstrated through controlling chiral helical structures of semiconducting polymers. Our approach enables precisely controlled charge transport and power generation properties of printed semiconducting polymers to help advance their commercial viability in solar cell devices. The ability to control non-equilibrium assembly during printing sets the stage for dynamically modulating assembled structures on the fly. We demonstrate this concept by programming nanoscale morphology and structure color of bottlebrush block copolymers during 3D printing. This approach holds the potential to reduce the use of environmentally toxic pigments by printing structure color. Presently, we are working closely with the Molecular Maker Lab on machine-learning-guided autonomous synthesis and manufacturing of organic solar cells to address the stability bottleneck. Besides unlocking the potential of printing technologies in energy sustainability, we are developing printed electronics for remote monitoring of plant growth to support human space exploration. 
 

About the Speaker

Ying Diao is an Associate Professor, University Scholar and Dow Chemical Company Faculty Scholar in Department of Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering at University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She serves as the Co-Chair of Molecular Science and Engineering in the Beckman Institute of Advanced Science and Technology, and a Thrust Lead of the Molecular Maker Lab Institute - an NSF AI Institute. She received her Ph.D. degree in Chemical Engineering from MIT in 2012. Her doctoral thesis was on understanding heterogeneous nucleation of pharmaceuticals by designing polymeric substrates. In her subsequent postdoctoral training at Stanford University, she pursued research in the thriving field of printed electronics. Diao group, started in 2015 at Illinois, focuses on understanding assembly of organic functional materials and innovating printing approaches that enable structural control down to the molecular and nanoscale. She has over 100 publications which have been cited close to 10,000 times. Her work has been frequently featured in scientific journals and news media. She is named to the MIT Technology Review’s annual list of Innovators Under 35 as a pioneer in nanotechnology and materials. She is also a recipient of NSF CAREER Award, NASA Early Career Faculty Award, 3M Non-Tenured Faculty Award and was selected as a Sloan Research Fellow in Chemistry as one of the “very best scientific minds working today”.

Associate Professor, 
Chemical and Biomolecular Engineering,
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign