
Abstract: Crystal Engineering: Design and Function of Stimuli-responsive Crystalline Materials
Research in the Benedict Lab is devoted to the design, synthesis, and characterization of technologically-relevant crystalline materials. By understanding and ultimately controlling non-covalent interactions in solids, the principles of crystal engineering may be harnessed to create advanced functional crystalline materials.
Photochromic technologies have the potential to transform traditionally passive materials into active materials which change their chemical or electronic properties in response to light stimulus. New photochromic materials are being synthesized and reported at an extremely rapid rate driven in large part by the numerous potential applications for these advanced materials including molecular switches, sensors, data storage, photomechanical devices and even biological switches.
One of the newest emerging applications for photochromic technologies being developed in the Benedict research lab is the development of photo-responsive crystalline materials capable of undergoing structural reorganization upon application of light. The evolution of strategies for the design and synthesis of diarylethene-based structural building units highlights the challenges of engineering crystals with these conformationally flexible molecules. This talk will include recent work on hybrid multi-stimuli responsive crystalline systems that serve as unique platforms to investigate the role of metal center properties (charge state, d-orbital energetics, presence of unpaired electrons, and spin-orbit coupling) on the properties of organic photoswitches (frontier orbital energetics, photoisomerization kinetics, and quantum yields).
Narrative: Jason started his career with a Bachelor of Science degree from Arizona State University in 2001 working in the field of fundamental reactions in inorganic chemistry. He then earned a Ph.D. in 2007 from the University of Washington working under Professor Bart Kahr investigating the optical properties of oriented chromophores within technologically important materials. In 2008, Jason began his post-doctoral studies at the University at Buffalo under the guidance of Professor Philip Coppens that involved time-resolved X-ray diffraction and the synthesis of novel polyoxotitanate clusters for solar energy applications. Jason began his independent career at the University at Buffalo in 2011 where his research seeks to develop advanced in situ X-ray diffraction techniques to achieve a molecular level understanding of the physical processes that occur in stimuli-responsive nanoporous materials with the ultimate goal of being able to create ‘by design’ crystalline materials with tailor-made properties. In 2013, Jason founded the US Crystal Growing Competition, a fun and exciting STEM-based competition for children in grades K-12.