A glow-in-the-dark battery
For the full BODIPY video from the University of Buffalo, download the Materials World App and check out our exclusive in-app content.
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A glow-in-the-dark battery
For the full BODIPY video from the University of Buffalo, download the Materials World App and check out our exclusive in-app content.
Glow-in-the-dark dyes may soon power cars
Glow-in-the-dark dyes may soon power cars
BTF Researchers have identified a glow-in-the-dark fluorescent dye which may be an ideal material for stockpiling energy in rechargeable, liquid-based batteries that could one day power cars and homes. The dye called BODIPY – or boron-dipyrromethene – shines brightly in the dark under a black light. According researchers from University at Buffalo (UB) in the US, the dye has unusual chemical…
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Glow-in-the-dark Dye Could Fuel Liquid-based Batteries
Glow-in-the-dark Dye Could Fuel Liquid-based Batteries
Could a glow-in-the-dark dye be the next advancement in energy storage technology?
Scientists at the University at Buffalo think so.
They have identified a fluorescent dye called BODIPY as an ideal material for stockpiling energy in rechargeable, liquid-based batteries that could one day power cars and homes.
BODIPY — short for boron-dipyrromethene — shines brightly in the dark under a black…
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This is BODIPY (pronounced bo-dippy), the common name for boron-dipyrromethene, a fluorescent dye molecule with a very large extinction coefficient (on the order of ϵ = 90000 M-1 cm-1) based upon a strongly allowed 1π→π* transition.[1] Its optical response is very highly dependent on its environment, so it can be used to tag biological molecules[2] and probe pH.
[1] Karolin et al. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1994, 116(17), 7801–7806
[2] Bovine pulmonary artery endothelial cells stained with an anti–ß-tubulin mouse monoclonal antibody in conjunction with BODIPY FL goat anti–mouse IgG for labeling microtubules, Texas Red-X phalloidin for labeling F-actin and DAPI for labeling nuclei.