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1.
Acc Chem Res ; 55(11): 1561-1572, 2022 06 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35604637

ABSTRACT

Symmetry breaking charge transfer (SBCT) is a process in which a pair of identical chromophores absorb a photon and use its energy to transfer an electron from one chromophore to the other, breaking the symmetry of the chromophore pair. This excited state phenomenon is observed in photosynthetic organisms where it enables efficient formation of separated charges that ultimately catalyze biosynthesis. SBCT has also been proposed as a means for developing photovoltaics and photocatalytic systems that operate with minimal energy loss. It is known that SBCT in both biological and artificial systems is in part made possible by the local environment in which it occurs, which can move to stabilize the asymmetric SBCT state. However, how environmental degrees of freedom act in concert with steric and structural constraints placed on a chromophore pair to dictate its ability to generate long-lived charge pairs via SBCT remain open topics of investigation.In this Account, we compare a broad series of dipyrrin dimers that are linked by distinct bridging groups to discern how the spatial separation and mutual orientation of linked chromophores and the structural flexibility of their linker each impact SBCT efficiency. Across this material set, we observe a general trend that SBCT is accelerated as the spatial separation between dimer chromophores decreases, consistent with the expectation that the electronic coupling between these units varies exponentially with their separation. However, one key observation is that the rate of charge recombination following SBCT was found to slow with decreasing interchromophore separation, rather than speed up. This stems from an enhancement of the dimer's structural rigidity due to increasing steric repulsion as the length of their linker shrinks. This rigidity further inhibits charge recombination in systems where symmetry has already enforced zero HOMO-LUMO overlap. Additionally, for the forward transfer, the active torsion is shown to increase LUMO-LUMO coupling, allowing for faster SBCT within bridging groups.By understanding trends for how rates of SBCT and charge recombination depend on a dimer's internal structure and its environment, we identify design guidelines for creating artificial systems for driving sustained light-induced charge separation. Such systems can find application in solar energy technologies and photocatalytic applications and can serve as a model for light-induced charge separation in biological systems.


Subject(s)
Photosynthesis , Solar Energy , Boron Compounds , Catalysis , Sunlight
2.
J Am Chem Soc ; 141(21): 8616-8626, 2019 May 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31062972

ABSTRACT

A systematic study is presented on the physical and photophysical properties of isoelectronic and isostructural Cu, Ag, and Au complexes with a common amide (N-carbazolyl) and two different carbene ligands (i.e., CAAC = (5 R,6 S)-2-(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)-6-isopropyl-3,3,9-trimethyl-2-azaspiro[4.5]decan-2-ylidene, MAC = 1,3-bis(2,6-diisopropylphenyl)-5,5-dimethyl-4-keto-tetrahydropyridylidene). The crystal structures of the (carbene)M(I)(N-carbazolyl) (MCAAC) and (MAC)M(I)(N-carbazolyl) (MMAC) complexes show coplanar carbene and carbzole ligands and C-M-N bond angles of ∼180°. The electrochemical properties and energies for charge transfer (CT) absorption and emission compounds are not significantly affected by the choice of metal ion. All six of the (carbene)M(Cz) complexes examined here display high photoluminescence quantum yields of 0.8-1.0. The compounds have short emission lifetimes (τ = 0.33-2.8 µs) that fall in the order Ag < Au < Cu, with the lifetimes of (carbene)Ag(Cz) roughly a factor of 10 shorter than for (carbene)Cu(Cz) complexes. Detailed temperature-dependent photophysical measurements (5-325 K) were carried out to determine the singlet and triplet emission lifetimes (τfl and τph, respectively) and the energy difference between the singlet and triplet excited state, Δ ES1-T1. The τfl values range between 20 and 85 ns, and the τph values are in the 50-200 µs regime. The emission at room temperature is due exclusively to E-type delayed fluorescence or TADF (i.e., T1→ΔS1→S0+hν ). The emission rate at room temperature is fully governed by Δ ES1-T1, with the silver complexes giving Δ ES1-T1 values of 150-180 cm-1 (18-23 meV), whereas the gold and copper complexes give values of 570-590 cm-1 (70-73 meV).

3.
Faraday Discuss ; 216(0): 379-394, 2019 Jul 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31020304

ABSTRACT

Symmetry breaking charge transfer (SBCT) is a process where a symmetrically disposed pair of identical chromophores forms a charge transfer excited state with the hole and electron on different chromophores, i.e. chr-chr + hν → chr+-chr-. Herein we explore this process in two dipyrrin-based bichromophoric systems. One of these bisdipyrrins involved a pair of BODIPY chromophores linked by a single bond at their meso-positions (compound 1) and the other involved two dipyrrin ligands coordinated in a tetrahedral geometry at the Zn2+ ion (compound 2). Both compounds show rapid SBCT in polar solvents and only dipyrrin based emission in nonpolar solvents, the latter arising from a dipyrrin localized excited sate (LE). By "tuning" the solvent polarity the equilibrium between the LE and SBCT states can be shifted to favor either state. Ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy (TA) was used to probe the kinetics of the charge transfer for 2 in solvents where the electron transfer is endergonic, exergonic and has a ΔG close to zero. Our TA derived rates were used to predict fluorescence efficiencies in each of the different solvent systems and showed a good correspondence to measured values. Detailed density functional theory (DFT) and time dependent DFT were used to model the ground states as well as the LE and SBCT states of 1 and 2, in both polar and nonpolar media. The ground and LE excited states show small dipole moments, while the SBCT states show dipole moments of 16.4 and 20.3 D for 1 and 2, respectively.

5.
Inorg Chem ; 56(1): 42-45, 2017 Jan 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27622511

ABSTRACT

We report a study on the optical properties of the layered polymorph of vacancy-ordered triple perovskite Cs3Bi2Br9. The electronic structure, determined from density functional theory calculations, shows the top of the valence band and bottom of the conduction band minima are, unusually, dominated by Bi s and p states, respectively. This produces a sharp exciton peak in the absorption spectra with a binding energy that was approximated to be 940 meV, which is substantially stronger than values found in other halide perovskites and, instead, more closely reflects values seen in alkali halide crystals. This large binding energy is indicative of a strongly localized character and results in a highly structured emission at room temperature as the exciton couples to vibrations in the lattice.

9.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 8(24): 5993-6001, 2017 Dec 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29185754

ABSTRACT

We use steady-state and ultrafast nonlinear spectroscopies in combination with density functional theory calculations to explain light emission below the optical gap energy (Eo) of crystalline samples of 5,12-diphenyl tetracene (DPT). In particular, the properties of vibrational coherences imprinted on a probe pulse transmitted through a DPT single crystal indicate discrete electronic transitions below Eo of this organic semiconductor. Analysis of coherence spectra leads us to propose structural defect states give rise to these discrete transitions and subgap light emission. We use the polarization dependence of vibrational coherence spectra to tentatively assign these defects in our DPT samples. Our results provide fundamental insights into the properties of midgap states in organic materials important for their application in next-generation photonics and optoelectronics technologies.

10.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 6(7): 1286-92, 2015 Apr 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26262989

ABSTRACT

We demonstrate Fourier transform (FT) 2D vibrational-electronic (2D VE) spectroscopy employing a novel mid-IR and optical pulse sequence. This new femtosecond third-order nonlinear spectroscopy provides the high time and frequency resolutions of existing 2D FT techniques; however, resulting 2D VE spectra contain IR and electronic dipole moment cross terms. We use 2D VE spectroscopy to help understand the vibrational-electronic couplings in the cyanide-bridged transition-metal mixed valence complex [(CN)5Fe(II)CNRu(III)(NH3)5](-) dissolved in formamide. The amplitudes of the cross-peaks in the 2D VE spectra reveal that three of the intramolecular cyanide stretching vibrations lying along the charge-transfer axis are coherently coupled to the metal-to-metal charge-transfer electronic transition with differing strengths. Analysis of the 2D VE line shapes reveals positive and negative correlations of the cyanide stretching modes with the charge-transfer transition depending on the physical orientation of the vibration in the molecule and its interaction with the solvent. The insights found thus far into the vibronic couplings in the mixed valence model system indicate that the 2D VE technique will be a valuable addition to the existing multidimensional spectroscopy toolbox.

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