RESUMEN
Acenes are attractive as building blocks for low gap organic materials with applications, for example, in organic light emitting diodes, solar cells, bioimaging and diagnostics. Previously, we have shown that modification of dipyridylanthracene via B-N Lewis pair fusion (BDPA) strongly redshifts the emission, while facilitating self-sensitized reactivity toward O2 to reversibly generate the corresponding endoperoxides. Herein, we report on the further expansion of the π-system of BDPA to a vinyl-substituted monomer, vinylene-bridged dimer, and a polymer with an average of 20 chromophores. The extension of π-conjugation results in largely reduced band gaps of 1.8â eV for the dimer and 1.7â eV for the polymer, the latter giving rise to NIR emission with a maximum at 731â nm and an appreciable quantum yield of 7 %. Electrochemical and computational studies reveal efficient delocalization of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) along the pyridyl-anthracene-pyridyl axis, which results in effective electronic communication between BDPA units, selectively lowers the LUMO, and ultimately narrows the band gap. Time-resolved emission and transient absorption (TA) measurements offer insights into the pertinent photophysical processes. Extension of π-conjugation also slows down the self-sensitized formation of endoperoxides, while significantly accelerating the thermal release of singlet oxygen to regenerate the parent acenes.
RESUMEN
The oxidation states of manganese minerals in the geological record have been interpreted as proxies for the evolution of molecular oxygen in the Archean eon. Here we report that an Archean manganese mineral, rhodochrosite (MnCO3), can be photochemically oxidized by light under anoxic, abiotic conditions. Rhodochrosite has a calculated bandgap of about 5.4 eV, corresponding to light energy centering around 230 nm. Light at that wavelength would have been present on Earth's surface in the Archean, prior to the formation of stratospheric ozone. We show experimentally that the photooxidation of rhodochrosite in suspension with light centered at 230 nm produced H2 gas and manganite (γ-MnOOH) with an apparent quantum yield of 1.37 × 10-3 moles hydrogen per moles incident photons. Our results suggest that manganese oxides could have formed abiotically on the surface in shallow waters and on continents during the Archean eon in the absence of molecular oxygen.
RESUMEN
Metal substitution of heme proteins is widely applied in the study of biologically relevant electron transfer (ET) reactions. It has been shown that many modified proteins remain in their native conformation and can provide useful insights into the molecular mechanism of electron transfer between the native protein and its substrates. We investigated ET reactions between zinc-substituted cytochrome P450(cam) and small organic compounds such as quinones and ferrocene, which are capable of accessing the protein's hydrophobic channel and binding close to the active site, like its native substrate, camphor. Following the substitution method developed by Gunsalus and co-workers [Wagner, G. C., et al. (1981) J. Biol. Chem. 256, 6262-6265], we have identified two dominant forms of the zinc-substituted protein, F450 and F420, that exhibit different photophysical and photochemical properties. The ET behavior of F420 suggests that hydrophobic redox-active ligands are able to penetrate the hydrophobic channel and place themselves in the direct vicinity of the Zn-porphyrin. In contrast, the slower ET quenching rates observed in the case of F450 indicate that the association is weak and occurs outside of the protein channel. Therefore, we conclude that F420 corresponds to the open structure of the native cytochrome P450(cam) while F450 has a closed or partially closed channel that is characteristic of the camphor-containing cytochrome P450(cam). The existence of two distinct conformers of Zn-bound P450(cam) is consistent with the findings of Goodin and co-workers [Lee, Y.-T., et al. (2010) Biochemistry 49, 3412-3419] and has significant consequences for future electron transfer studies on this popular metalloenzyme.
Asunto(s)
Alcanfor 5-Monooxigenasa/química , Citocromos/química , Riboflavina/análogos & derivados , Zinc/química , Bioquímica/métodos , Dominio Catalítico , Transporte de Electrón , Escherichia coli/metabolismo , Hemo/química , Concentración de Iones de Hidrógeno , Cinética , Ligandos , Fotoquímica/métodos , Unión Proteica , Conformación Proteica , Riboflavina/química , Espectrometría de Fluorescencia/métodos , Espectrofotometría/métodosRESUMEN
A viologen derivative, 1,1'-di-p-tolyl-(4,4'-bipyridine)-1,1'-diium dichloride (DTV(2+)), was studied in solution and encapsulated in cucurbit[7]uril (CB7), a macrocyclic host. Upon encapsulation, DTV(2+) exhibited dramatically enhanced fluorescence. Aqueous solutions of DTV(2+) were weakly fluorescent (Φ = 0.01, τ < 20 ps), whereas the emission of the DTV(2+)@2CB7 complex was enhanced by 1 order of magnitude (Φ = 0.12, τ = 0.7 ns) and blue-shifted by 35 nm. Similar properties were observed in the presence of NaCl. DTV(2+) in a poly(methyl methacrylate) matrix was fluorescent with a spectrum similar to that observed for the complex in solution. (1)H NMR and UV-vis titrations indicated that the DTV(2+)@2CB7 complex is formed in aqueous solutions with complexation constants K(1) = (1.2 ± 0.3) × 10(4) M(-1) and K(2)= (1.0 ± 0.4) × 10(4) M(-1) in water. Density functional theory and configuration interaction singles calculations suggested that the hindrance of the rotational relaxation of the S(1) state of DTV(2+) caused by encapsulation within the host or a polymer matrix plays a key role in the observed emission enhancement. The absorption and emission spectra of DTV(2+)@2CB7 in water exhibited a large Stokes shift (ΔSt ~ 9000 cm(-1)) and no fine structure. DTV(2+) is a good electron acceptor [E°(DTV(2+)/DTV(â¢+)) = -0.30 V vs Ag/AgCl] and a strong photooxidant [E°(DTV*(2+)/DTV(â¢+)) = 0.09 V vs NHE]).
RESUMEN
Optical Kerr gating is widely used in ultrafast measurements ranging from pulse characterization to spectroscopy and microscopy. We examined the efficiency and the temporal response of three cubic lattice Kerr media, YAG, GGG and BGO, and compared them with the well studied fused silica (fast response, low efficiency) and STO (high efficiency, slow response). YAG and GGG emerged as superior materials for ultrafast spectroscopy and microscopy applications thanks to their fast Kerr response and considerably higher gating efficiency than silica at low gating energies. Importantly, it was found that in collinear geometry all tested materials except STO are capable of reaching nearly 100% transmission.
RESUMEN
A water-soluble octacarboxyhemicarcerand was used as a shuttle to transport redox-active substrates across the aqueous medium and deliver them to the target protein. The results show that weak multivalent interactions and conformational flexibility can be exploited to reversibly bind complex supramolecular assemblies to biological molecules. Hydrophobic electron donors and acceptors were encapsulated within the hemicarcerand, and photoinduced electron transfer (ET) between the Zn-substituted cytochrome c (MW = 12.3 kD) and the host-guest complexes (MW = 2.2 kD) was used to probe the association between the negatively charged hemicarceplex and the positively charged protein. The behavior of the resulting ternary protein-hemicarcerand-guest assembly was investigated in two binding limits: (1) when K(encaps) â« K(assoc), the hemicarcerand transports the ligand to the protein while protecting it from the aqueous medium; and (2) when K(assoc) > K(encaps), the hemicarcerand-protein complex is formed first, and the hemicarcerand acts as an artificial receptor site that intercepts ligands from solution and positions them close to the active site of the metalloenzyme. In both cases, ET mediated by the protein-bound hemicarcerand is much faster than that due to diffusional encounters with the respective free donor or acceptor in solution. The measured ET rates suggest that the dominant binding region of the host-guest complex on the surface of the protein is consistent with the docking area of the native redox partner of cytochrome c. The strong association with the protein is attributed to the flexible conformation and adaptable charge distribution of the hemicarcerand, which allow for surface-matching with the cytochrome.
Asunto(s)
Citocromos c/química , Luz , Cristalografía por Rayos X , Transporte de Electrón , Interacciones Hidrofóbicas e Hidrofílicas , Modelos Moleculares , Solubilidad , Termodinámica , Agua/química , Zinc/químicaRESUMEN
Vibrational cooling of azulene encapsulated in a hemicarcerand molecular container was studied by pump-probe spectroscopy. Within 1.5 ps of excitation of azulene to the S1 state, rapid internal conversion through a conical intersection leads to the formation of a vibrationally hot (â¼1080 K) ground state, the subsequent cooling of which can be monitored by tracking the evolution of the red-shifted hot band at the edge of the ground-state absorption. It was found that the cooling of the hot S0 state of azulene in the host-guest complex (hemicarceplex) is 2-4 times faster than that in common organic solvents. Such large acceleration points to a high density of matching vibrational modes and efficient mechanical coupling between the guest and the host. The experimental observations were fully corroborated by the results of molecular dynamics simulations.
RESUMEN
Vibrational cooling was investigated in a set of homologous dimers and trimers with methyl viologen repeat units (MV2+). The rapid, <500 fs decay of the D1 excited state of monoreduced viologen (MV+â¢) via a conical intersection allows the preparation of a vibrationally hot D0 ground state with a large excess energy of 1.7 eV, which is equivalent to the initial effective temperature of â¼800 K. Pump-probe spectroscopy was used to monitor the disappearance of the characteristic D0 â D1 hot absorption band, which appears at longer wavelengths than the steady-state spectrum of "cold" MV+⢠in equilibrium with the solvent. It is assumed that the vibrational excitation of the ground is initially confined to the same monoreduced viologen repeat unit, which was optically excited to the localized electronic D1 state, although some degree of redistribution may occur already in the excited state. The observed cooling rates depend on the size and topology of the oligomer, with the linear trimer exhibiting significantly faster thermalization than the branched one. The experimental results were corroborated by molecular dynamics simulations carried out in the harmonic approximation. The dynamics of the thermal equilibration in these systems appears to be consistent with primarily ballistic initial propagation of the vibrational excess energy over distances as large as â¼4 nm and suggests the presence of interference between the equivalent pathways in the branched trimer.
RESUMEN
[reaction: see text] Photolysis of 3-(2,2,2-triphenylethoxy)-3-chlorodiazirine gives 2,2,2-triphenylethoxychlorocarbene which fragments with 1,2-phenyl migration and loss of CO and Cl(-) to yield the 1,1,2-triphenylethyl cation and thence 1,1,2-triphenylethene by proton loss. However, ps and fs laser flash photolysis provides evidence that up to 25% of the alkene product stems from carbocation that arises directly from excited diazirine rather than from the carbene.
RESUMEN
As it has been shown by pump-probe experiments electron injection at the interface between a dye molecule and mesoporous TiO2 proceeds with rates exceeding 1 x 10(13) s(-1). However, similar dye-TiO2 systems exhibit residual dye emission with lifetimes extending into the long nanosecond range. To address this inhomogeneity of injection rates time-correlated single photon counting microscopy was used to compare the emission behavior of dye-sensitized mesoporous films of TiO2 with that of individual anatase nanoparticles that had undergone extensive dialysis. The sensitized films produce intense residual emission with multiexponential decay components as long as 220 ns. The channels of mesoporous films contain physisorbed and trapped dye, which is the dominant source of the emission. It is likely that the wide range of lifetimes reflects the distribution of mean free paths experienced by the loose dye molecules diffusing within the film prior to undergoing oxidative quenching. In contrast, the intensity of emission from individual nanoparticles from which the loose dye was removed by dialysis is orders of magnitude lower. The lifetimes obtained from such particles are much shorter, with the primary component on a sub-nanosecond time scale. The presence of residual emission with a 230 ps lifetime shows that even on the surfaces of dialyzed nanoparticles there is a fraction of sensitizer molecules that do not inject electrons with the same high rate as is observed in ultrafast pump-probe experiments on films. Since the physisorbed dye was removed from these samples by dialysis, the residual emission is likely to originate from dye molecules bound to surface defects. Unusual collective emission bursts were observed in some of the measurements on sensitized nanoparticles. We attribute this behavior to stimulated emission from individual nanocrystallites.
Asunto(s)
2,2'-Dipiridil/análogos & derivados , Colorantes/química , Membranas Artificiales , Nanopartículas , Compuestos Organometálicos/química , Titanio/química , 2,2'-Dipiridil/química , Electrones , Tamaño de la Partícula , Porosidad , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Espectrofotometría Ultravioleta , Propiedades de SuperficieRESUMEN
Phenylenethynylene (PE) rigid linkers (para and meta) were used to anchor pyrene to the surface of TiO2 (anatase) and ZrO2 nanoparticle thin films through the two COOH groups of an isophthalic acid (Ipa) unit. Four chromophore-linker models were studied in solution and bound. Two are novel meta-pyrene-PE linker systems: dimethyl 5-(3-(1-pyrenylethynyl)phenylethynyl)-isophthalate, carrying one pyrene, and dimethyl 5-(bis-3,5-(1-pyrenylethynyl)phenylethynyl)-isophthalate, carrying two. These were compared with para rigid-rods dimethyl 5-(1-pyrenylethynyl)isophthalate and dimethyl 5-(4-(1-pyrenylethynyl)phenylethynyl)-isophthalate, each carrying one pyrene but varying in length. The length of the PE linkers and the para or meta substitution influence the photophysical properties of the compounds. The extinction coefficient increased, and the long wavelength absorbance of the pyrene chromophore was shifted to the red with increasing conjugation. Compared to unsubstituted pyrene, the pyrene-linker systems were characterized by short fluorescence lifetimes (tau approximately 2 ns in tetrahydrofuran solutions), but quantum yields were close to unity. ZINDO/S CI calculations attribute this effect to a switching in the order of the two lowest-lying singlet states of pyrene. High surface coverages, approximately 10(-8) mol/cm2, and carboxylate binding modes on nanostructured TiO2 films were obtained in all cases. The appearance of a pyrene excimer emission on ZrO2, an insulator, indicates that the pyrene-linker system is closely packed (Py-Py < 4 A) on the surface. The fluorescence emission on TiO2 was completely quenched, consistent with quantitative and rapid electron injection into the semiconductor indicating that the pyrene excimer acts as a sensitizer. Photoelectrochemical studies in regenerative solar cells with I3-/I- as the redox mediator indicated near-quantitative conversion of absorbed photons into an electrical current.
Asunto(s)
Alquinos/química , Éteres/química , Nanopartículas/química , Pirenos/química , Titanio/química , Circonio/química , Adsorción , Sitios de Unión , Electroquímica , Estructura Molecular , Fotoquímica , Sensibilidad y Especificidad , Espectroscopía Infrarroja por Transformada de Fourier/métodos , Propiedades de SuperficieRESUMEN
The ability of a dendritic network to intercept electrons and extend the lifetime of a short-lived photoinduced charge separated (CS) state was investigated in a homologous family of methyl viologen (MV(2+)) dendrons spanning four generations, G0 through G3. The CS state in the parent pyrene-methylene-viologen G0 system with a single acceptor exhibits an extremely short lifetime of τ = 0.72 ps. The expansion of the viologen network introduces slower components to the recombination kinetics by allowing the injected electron to migrate further away from the donor. The long-lived fraction of the population increases monotonically in the order G3 > G2 > G1 > G0, while the respective recombination rates decrease. In the highest generation of the dendron â¼14% of the CS state population experiences a 10-fold or greater lifetime extension. Long range tunneling across multiple viologen units and sequential site-to-site hopping both contribute to the overall effect. The large excess energy deposited in the apical viologen upon charge separation and the presence of an extended network of low lying π-orbitals likely facilitate shuttling the electron further down the dendron.
RESUMEN
The behavior of excitons and excess electrons in the confined space of a molecular polyoxotitanate cluster Ti17(µ4-O)4(µ3-O)16(µ2-O)4(OPr(i))20 (in short Ti17) was studied using femtosecond pump-probe transient absorption, pulse radiolysis, and fluorescence spectroscopy. Due to pronounced quantum size effects, the electronic spectra of the exciton, Ti17*, and the excess electron carrying radical anion, Ti17(â¢-), are blue-shifted in comparison with bulk TiO2 and have maxima at 1.91 and 1.24 eV, respectively. The 0.7 eV difference in the position of the absorption maxima of Ti17* and Ti17(â¢-) indicates the presence of strong Coulomb interaction between the conduction band electron and the valence band hole in the â¼1 nm diameter cluster. Ground state Raman spectra and the vibronic structure of the fluorescence spectrum point to the importance of the interfacial ligand modes in the stabilization and localization of the fully relaxed exciton. Four pentacoordinate Ti sites near the surface of the cluster appear to play a special role in this regard. Solvent polarity has only a minor influence on the spectral behavior of Ti17*. Exciton recombination in Ti17 is faster than in anatase nanoparticles or mesoporous films. The kinetics exhibits three components, ranging from less than 1 ps to 100 ps, which are tentatively assigned to the geminate recombination within the core of the cluster and to the decay of the surface stabilized charge transfer exciton. A persistent long-lived component with τ > 300 ps may indicate the involvement of intraband dark states, i.e., triplet excitons (3)Ti17*.
RESUMEN
We present a Kerr-gated microscope capable of collecting diffraction-limited 2D fluorescence images with sub-100 fs time resolution. The concept is based on the insertion of a solid-state optical Kerr gate into a wide-field microscope. In addition to the considerably improved temporal resolution, the wide-field design allows for simultaneous tracking of several objects and ultrafast fluorescence lifetime imaging of doped and heterogeneous surfaces. The ultrafast fluorescence dynamics of gold nanoparticles is presented as an example of the capabilities of the instrument.
RESUMEN
Ultrafast photolysis (lambdaex = 270, 350, or 360 nm) of bromophenyl, chlorophenyl, fluorophenyl, and fluoro-para-trifluoromethylphenyl diazirines produces transient species which absorb broadly in the UV and visible regions. Transient decay can be fit to either mono- or biexponential functions (tau1 approximately 0.3-10 ps, tau2 approximately 10-350 ps; dependent on solvent and halogen). Fluoro- and chlorophenylcarbene are formed within the time resolution of the spectrometer (300 fs, 270 nm excitation). Bromophenyl diazirine decay (270 nm excitation) correlates with the growth of bromophenylcarbene. Solvent and substituent effects on the slower decays of the transient absorptions are consistent with assigning the carriers of transient absorption in the visible region to ring-opened zwitterionic species.
RESUMEN
The synthesis of well-defined luminescent organoboron polymers via a novel three-step procedure starting from silylated polystyrene is reported. Highly selective borylation of poly(4-trimethylsilylstyrene) (PS-Si), followed by replacement of the bromine substituents in poly(4-dibromoborylstyrene) (PS-BBr) with substituted thienyl groups (R = H, 3-hexyl, 5-hexyl), and final introduction of the 8-hydroxyquinolato moiety yields a series of new organoboron quinolate polymers in 67-83% isolated yield. The hexyl-substituted polymers are highly soluble and solution-processable yielding thin films that efficiently emit light at 513-514 nm upon excitation at 395 nm.
RESUMEN
While advances in protein design have made possible the construction of protein architectures with nativelike properties and predictable structures and function, there are as of yet no examples of functional, protein-based, solar energy conversion systems. This communication describes the design and characterization of an artificial reaction center (RC) protein that closely resembles the function of the natural photosynthetic RC. The synthetic protein, designed by the protein design program CORE, participates in multiple reduction/oxidation cycles with exogenous acceptors/donors following photoexcitation. The designed metalloprotein, aRC, consists of a tetrahelical bundle functionalized with two bis-histidine bound metal cofactors: a Ru(bpy)2 moiety and a heme group. Two distinct bis-histidine binding sites were engineered for each of these metal centers. Photoexcitation of aRC results in rapid ET from the RuII complex to the heme group (kET >/= 5 x 1010 s-1) yielding a long-lived (70 ns) charge-separated state (CSS), RuIII/FeII. This long-lived CSS participates in subsequent ET reactions with exogenous donors and acceptors in multiple photocycles, thus mimicking the basic function of native photosynthetic RCs. This study illustrates the successful design and construction of a protein-based functional charge separation device using a combination of automated computational protein design and knowledge of the engineering principles of biological electron tunneling extracted from natural electron-transfer systems. To our knowledge, this represents the first example of a functional protein-based artificial reaction center.
Asunto(s)
2,2'-Dipiridil/análogos & derivados , Materiales Biomiméticos/química , Metaloproteínas/química , Proteínas del Complejo del Centro de Reacción Fotosintética/química , Rutenio/química , 2,2'-Dipiridil/química , Secuencia de Aminoácidos , Dicroismo Circular , Citocromos c/química , Secuencias Hélice-Asa-Hélice , Hemo/química , Datos de Secuencia Molecular , Naftoquinonas/química , Compuestos Organometálicos/química , Oxidación-Reducción , Fotosíntesis , Conformación Proteica , Espectrometría de Masa por Láser de Matriz Asistida de Ionización DesorciónRESUMEN
Extended rigid tripodal sensitizers were used to investigate the rate of long-distance photoinduced charge transfer from the MLCT excited states of RuII-based chromophores into mesoporous TiO2 films. The distance between the RuII center and the surface of the semiconductor was 24 A. Rapid biexponential charge injection with a major subpicosecond component as fast as 240 fs was observed upon femtosecond laser excitation of the tripods bound to the TiO2 surface. This rate exceeds the typical rates of vibrational cooling and thus strongly supports the possibility of "hot electron injection" occurring at very large donor-to-semiconductor distances.