| New concepts in the design and function of organic dyes as sensitizers for solar energy harvesting are needed. Commercial viability constrains these designs: (a) cost effective synthesis, (b) long-term stability, and (c) an important goal is to reduce the environmental impact of the product at the end of its life cycle. Simple porphyrinoid dyes meet these constraints, but new modes of incorporation into devices are needed to increase the efficiency of charge separation that drives any photonic device designed to harvest light. In this thesis, we will show how complex material architectures on surfaces need not to be the result of complex molecular structures or strong intermolecular forces that form in solution and deposit intact onto surfaces. Varying environmental conditions we can dictate morphology of self-organized structures on surfaces. These studies provide further insights into the design principles, processing, and extent of electron and energy transfer in supramolecular porphyrin materials.;We are also developing a new strategy to couple porphyrinoid dyes to oxide surfaces using hafnium and zirconium metalloporphyrins and metallophthalocyanines.The mode of dye attachment to oxide surfaces is a key parameter for the construction of efficient dye sensitized solar cells. Porphyrinoid dyes containing oxophylic group (IV) metal ions that protrude from on face of the macrocycle allow connections directly to oxide surfaces, wherein the metal ion serves as the conduit. Since the charge transport efficiency is mediated by appropriate matching of molecular HOMO-LUMO gaps to semiconductor band gaps, we will show characterized solution phase ground and excited redox potentials of these dyes, and also photophysical properties of dye excited state using transient absorbance spectroscopy. |