Jesse Tamayo

Jesse Tamayo
University of California, Riverside | UCR · Department of Chemistry

B.s in chemistry

About

5
Publications
1,085
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78
Citations
Introduction
Jesse Tamayo currently works at the Department of Chemistry , University of California, Riverside. Jesse does research in Materials Chemistry. Their most recent publication is 'Bidirectional Solvatofluorochromism of a Pyrrolo[3,2-B]pyrrole–diketopyrrolopyrrole Hybrid'.
Additional affiliations
June 2015 - June 2021
University of California, Riverside
Position
  • PhD Student

Publications

Publications (5)
Article
The impact of halide perovskites on photonics, optoelectronics and energy science is indisputable. The pursuit of perovskite nanomaterials has open roads for explorations where large surface-to-volume ratios are paramount. While the solution-phase synthesis of most nanoparticles is relatively easy, the cleaning steps for obtaining populations of hi...
Article
Full-text available
Correction for ‘Multifaceted aspects of charge transfer’ by James B. Derr et al. , Phys. Chem. Chem. Phys. , 2020, 22 , 21583–21629, DOI: 10.1039/d0cp01556c.
Article
Charge transfer and charge transport are by far among the most important processes for sustaining life on Earth and for making our modern ways of living possible. Involving multiple electron-transfer steps, photosynthesis and cellular respiration have been principally responsible for managing the energy flow in the biosphere of our planet since the...
Article
Full-text available
Charge transfer (CT) and charge transport (CTr) are at the core of life-sustaining biological processes and of processes that govern the performance of electronic and energy-conversion devices. Electric fields are invaluable for guiding charge movement. Therefore, as electrostatic analogues of magnets, electrets have unexplored potential for genera...
Article
Hybridization of electron donors and acceptors provides routes to long-wavelength absorbing and fluorescing dyes. Varying the coupling of low-lying charge-transfer (CT) states with the ground and different locally excited states profoundly affects the photophysics of such donor-acceptor conjugates. Herein, we hybridize an electron-deficient diketop...

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