Timothy R. Cook

PhD

Timothy Cook.

Timothy R. Cook

PhD

Timothy R. Cook

PhD

Director of Graduate Studies
Professor

Research Interests

Self-assembly and characterization of discrete inorganic metallacycles and cages; energy harvesting, transport and storage in photo- and redox-active molecular materials. Polynuclear catalysts for small molecule activations of relevance to renewable energy schemes.

Education

  • Research Assistant Professor, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, 2012-2014
  • Postdoctoral Researcher, University of Utah, Salt Lake City, UT, 2010-2012
  • PhD, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, MA, 2010
  • BA, Boston University, Boston, MA, 2005

Specializations

  • Molecular self-assembly with an emphasis on coordination chemistry
  • Supramolecular inorganic chemistry
  • Catalysis focused on energy-relevant transformations
  • Photochemistry and spectroscopy
  • Electrochemistry

Research Summary

Coordination-driven self-assembly is a synthetic methodology capable of delivering diverse, tunable architectures, yet is currently underdeveloped as a tool to address the chemistry of energy conversion. In particular, the ability to independently design molecular subunits with specific properties which can combine into multifunctional scaffolds provides a method to generate functionally complex yet synthetically facile materials. The Cook Group exploits coordination-driven self-assembly to explore energy-relevant materials with modular photo-, redox- and catalytically active building blocks that can rapidly incorporate new molecular discoveries relevant to energy harvesting, storage, and use.

Our research program is rooted in fundamental structural, photophysical and electrochemical characterization techniques applied towards discrete supramolecular coordination complexes (SCCs) formed using the principles of molecular self-assembly and coordination chemistry. Primary thrusts include:

(1) Light Harvesting Metallacycles and Cages via Self-Assembly

The efficient capture of solar energy requires materials that strongly absorb across the visible spectrum so as to effectively match the solar flux. Chemical approaches to new light harvesting materials often rely on the organization of molecular units, inspired by nature’s photosystems. The precedent for strongly absorbing metal and organic-based molecules motivates our design of discrete supramolecular coordination complexes containing complementary chromophores.

(2) Redox-Active SCCs for Redox Flow Devices

Redox flow batteries (RFBs) break the paradigm of traditional battery designs by separating the charge carriers from the core of the device. The electrolyte chemistries of current RFBs center on small molecules and/or simple ions, which exacerbate electrolyte mixing and decomposition and offer limited tunability. We explore the synthesis and characterization of multinuclear redox-active species in the context of RFB charge carriers to interface with energy capture schemes, thereby developing a rich electrochemistry of inorganic supramolecular complexes.

(3) Coordination-Driven Self-Assembly of Cofacial Catalysts

The activation of energy-relevant small molecules is difficult owing to the multi-electron multi-proton nature of this chemistry. Polynuclear designs distribute redox and coordination demands across multiple sites which can act in concert to effect key catalytic steps. The formation of cofacial catalysts can be greatly simplified through the use of coordination-driven self-assembly, wherein two catalytic species can be tethered via distal coordination to pillar building blocks. Since the bridging pillar and catalyst platforms are independently synthesized, the size, shape, flexibility, and chemical properties of resultant cofacial complexes can be readily optimized by orthogonal adjustments, which will not significantly affect self-assembly.

Selected Recent Publications

Google Scholar profile: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=OnhxmkkAAAAJ&hl=en

  • Gilbert, A. B.; Crawley, M. R.; Higgins, T. J.; Li, Y. C.; Watson, D. F.*, Cook, T. R.* “Exploring the Emergent Redox Chemistry of Pd(II) Nodes with Pendant Ferrocenes: From Precursors, through Building Blocks, to Self-Assemblies” Inorganics, 2023, 11, 122. https://doi.org/10.3390/inorganics11030122
  • Pastore, V. J.; Sullivan, M. G.; Welgama, H. K.; Crawley. M. R.; Friedman, A.E.; Rumsey, C.; Trebbin, M.; Rzayev, J.; Cook, T. R.* Clickable Norbornene-Based Zirconium Carboxylate Polyhedra. Chem. Mater. 2023, 35, 1651. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.2c03252
  • Welgama, H. K.; Crawley, M. R.; McKone, J. R.; Cook, T. R.* “Investigations of Nanoparticle Suspensions of Prussian Blue and Its Copper Analogue: Amine Functionalization and Electrochemical Studies” Inorg. Chem. 2023, 1, 1455. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c03545
  • Sullivan, M. G.; Sokolow, G. E.; Jensen, E. T.; Crawley, M. R.; MacMillan, S. N.; Cook, T. R.* “Altering the solubility of metal–organic polyhedra via pendant functionalization of Cp3Zr3O(OH)3 nodes” Dalton Trans. 2023, 52, 338. https://doi.org/10.1039/D2DT03401H
  • Crawley, M. R.; Zhang, D.; Cook, T. R.* “Electrocatalytic production of hydrogen peroxide enabled by post-synthetic modification of a self-assembled porphyrin cube” Inorg. Chem. Front. 2023, 10, 316. https://doi.org/10.1039/D2QI02050E
  • Rosch, L. E.; Crawley, M. R.; O’Donnell, R. M.; Rohrabaugh, T. N.; Ensley, T. R.; Sobiech, T. A.; Cook, T. R.* Shining Light on the Solution- and Excited-State Dynamics of Chalcogenopyrylium Polymethine Dyes. Organometallics, 2022, 41, 2301. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.organomet.2c00263
  • Zhang, D.; Crawley, M. R.; Oldacre, A. N.; Kyle, L. J.; MacMillan, S. N.; Cook, T. R.* Lowering the Symmetry of Cofacial Porphyrin Prisms for Selective Oxygen Reduction Electrocatalysis. Inorg. Chem. 2022, https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.2c01109
  • Sokolow, G. E.; Crawley, M. R.; Morphet, D. R.; Asik, D.; Spernyak, J. A.; McGray, A. R.; Cook, T. R.*, Morrow, J. R. Metal−Organic Polyhedron with Four Fe(III) Centers Producing Enhanced T1 Magnetic Resonance Imaging Contrast in Tumors. Inorg. Chem. 2022, 61, 2603 https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.1c03660
  • Crawley, M. R.; Zhang, D.; Oldacre, A. N.; Beavers, C. M.; Friedman, A. E.; Cook, T. R.* Tuning the Reactivity of Cofacial Porphyrin Prisms for Oxygen Reduction Using Modular Building Blocks. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2021, 143, 1098. https://doi.org/10.1021/jacs.0c11895
  • Pastore, V. J.; Cook, T. R.* Coordination-driven Self-Assembly in Polymer-Inorganic Hybrid Materials. Chem. Mater. 2020, 32, 3680. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.chemmater.0c00851