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1.
J Phys Chem B ; 128(1): 96-108, 2024 Jan 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38145895

RESUMEN

Electron transfer (ET) between neutral and cationic tryptophan residues in the azurin construct [ReI(H126)(CO)3(dmp)](W124)(W122)CuI (dmp = 4,7-Me2-1,10-phenanthroline) was investigated by Born-Oppenheimer quantum-mechanics/molecular mechanics/molecular dynamics (QM/MM/MD) simulations. We focused on W124•+ ← W122 ET, which is the middle step of the photochemical hole-hopping process *ReII(CO)3(dmp•-) ← W124 ← W122 ← CuI, where sequential hopping amounts to nearly 10,000-fold acceleration over single-step tunneling (ACS Cent. Sci. 2019, 5, 192-200). In accordance with experiments, UKS-DFT QM/MM/MD simulations identified forward and reverse steps of W124•+ ↔ W122 ET equilibrium, as well as back ET ReI(CO)3(dmp•-) → W124•+ that restores *ReII(CO)3(dmp•-). Strong electronic coupling between the two indoles (≥40 meV in the crossing region) makes the productive W124•+ ← W122 ET adiabatic. Energies of the two redox states are driven to degeneracy by fluctuations of the electrostatic potential at the two indoles, mainly caused by water solvation, with contributions from the protein dynamics in the W122 vicinity. ET probability depends on the orientation of Re(CO)3(dmp) relative to W124 and its rotation diminishes the hopping yield. Comparison with hole hopping in natural systems reveals structural and dynamics factors that are important for designing efficient hole-hopping processes.


Asunto(s)
Azurina , Azurina/química , Triptófano/química , Oxidación-Reducción , Transporte de Electrón , Indoles
2.
Phys Chem Chem Phys ; 24(42): 25864-25877, 2022 Nov 02.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36279148

RESUMEN

We present a study of excited-states relaxation of the complex ReCl(CO)3(bpy) (bpy = 2,2-bipyridine) using a nonadiabatic TD-DFT dynamics on spin-mixed potential energy surfaces in explicit acetonitrile (ACN) and dimethylsulfoxide (DMSO) solutions up to 800 fs. ReCl(CO)3(bpy) belongs to a group of important photosensitizers which show ultrafast biexponential subpicosecond fluorescence decay kinetics. The choice of solvents was motivated by the different excited-state relaxation dynamics observed in subpicosecond time-resolved IR (TRIR) experiments. Simulations of intersystem crossing (ISC) showed the development of spin-mixed states in both solvents. Transformation of time-dependent populations of spin-mixed states enabled to monitor the temporal evolution of individual singlet and triplet states, fitting of bi-exponential decay kinetics, and simulating the time-resolved fluorescence spectra that show only minor differences between the two solvents. Analysis of structural relaxation and solvent reorganization employing time-resolved proximal distribution functions pointed to the factors influencing the fluorescence decay time constants. Nonadiabatic dynamics simulations of time-evolution of electronic, molecular, and solvent structures emerge as a powerful technique to interpret time-resolved spectroscopic data and ultrafast photochemical reactivity.

3.
Inorg Chem ; 61(6): 2745-2759, 2022 Feb 14.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34905688

RESUMEN

Binuclear Rh(I) and Ir(I) TMB (2,5-dimethyl-2,5-diisocyanohexane) and dimen (1,8-diisocyanomenthane) complexes possess dσ*pσ and dπpσ singlet and triplet excited states that can be selectively excited in the visible and UV spectral regions. Using perturbational spin-orbit TDDFT, we unraveled the detailed character and spin mixing of these electronic transitions and found that delocalization of pσ and dπ orbitals over C≡N- groups makes C≡N stretching vibrations sensitive reporters of electron density and structural changes upon electronic excitation. Picosecond time-resolved infrared spectra measured after visible light, 375 nm, and 316 nm excitation revealed excitation-wavelength-dependent deactivation cascades. Visible light irradiation prepares the 1dσ*pσ state that, after one or two (sub)picosecond relaxation steps, undergoes 70-1300 ps intersystem crossing to 3dσ*pσ, which is faster for the more flexible dimen complexes. UV-excited 1,3dπpσ states decay with (sub)picosecond kinetics through a manifold of high-lying triplet and mixed-spin states to 3dσ*pσ with lifetimes in the range of 6-19 ps (316 nm) and 19-43 ps (375 nm, Ir only), bypassing 1dσ*pσ. Most excited-state conversion and some relaxation steps are accompanied by direct decay to the ground state that is especially pronounced for the most flexible long/eclipsed Rh(dimen) conformer.

4.
J Phys Chem B ; 125(51): 13858-13867, 2021 12 30.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34914398

RESUMEN

Excited-state character and dynamics of two 6-(dimethylamino)-2-acylnaphthalene dyes (Prodan and Badan-SCH2CH2OH) were studied by picosecond time-resolved IR spectroscopy (TRIR) in solvents of different polarity and relaxation times: hexane, CD3OD, and glycerol-d8. In all these solvents, near-UV excitation initially produced the same S1(ππ*) excited state characterized by a broad TRIR signal. A very fast decay (3, ∼100 ps) followed in hexane, whereas conversion to a distinct IR spectrum with a ν(C═O) band downshifted by 76 cm-1 occurred in polar/H-bonding solvents, slowing down on going from CD3OD (1, 23 ps) to glycerol-d8 (5.5, 51, 330 ps). The final relaxed excited state was assigned as planar Me2N → C═O intramolecular charge transfer S1(ICT) by comparing experimental and TDDFT-calculated spectra. TRIR conversion kinetics are comparable to those of early stages of multiexponential fluorescence decay and dynamic fluorescence red-shift. This work presents a strong evidence that Prodan-type dyes undergo solvation-driven charge separation in their S1 state, which is responsible for the dynamic fluorescence Stokes shift observed in polar/H-bonding solvents. The time evolution of the optically prepared S1(ππ*) state to the S1(ICT) final state reflects environment relaxation and solvation dynamics. This finding rationalizes the widespread use of Prodan-type dyes as probes of environment dynamics and polarity.


Asunto(s)
Colorantes Fluorescentes , 2-Naftilamina/análogos & derivados , Cinética , Solventes , Análisis Espectral
5.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(11)2021 03 16.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33836608

RESUMEN

Hole hopping through tryptophan/tyrosine chains enables rapid unidirectional charge transport over long distances. We have elucidated structural and dynamical factors controlling hopping speed and efficiency in two modified azurin constructs that include a rhenium(I) sensitizer, Re(His)(CO)3(dmp)+, and one or two tryptophans (W1, W2). Experimental kinetics investigations showed that the two closely spaced (3 to 4 Å) intervening tryptophans dramatically accelerated long-range electron transfer (ET) from CuI to the photoexcited sensitizer. In our theoretical work, we found that time-dependent density-functional theory (TDDFT) quantum mechanics/molecular mechanics/molecular dynamics (QM/MM/MD) trajectories of low-lying triplet excited states of ReI(His)(CO)3(dmp)+-W1(-W2) exhibited crossings between sensitizer-localized (*Re) and charge-separated [ReI(His)(CO)3(dmp•-)/(W1•+ or W2•+)] (CS1 or CS2) states. Our analysis revealed that the distances, angles, and mutual orientations of ET-active cofactors fluctuate in a relatively narrow range in which the cofactors are strongly coupled, enabling adiabatic ET. Water-dominated electrostatic field fluctuations bring *Re and CS1 states to a crossing where *Re(CO)3(dmp)+←W1 ET occurs, and CS1 becomes the lowest triplet state. ET is promoted by solvation dynamics around *Re(CO)3(dmp)+(W1); and CS1 is stabilized by Re(dmp•-)/W1•+ electron/hole interaction and enhanced W1•+ solvation. The second hop, W1•+←W2, is facilitated by water fluctuations near the W1/W2 unit, taking place when the electrostatic potential at W2 drops well below that at W1•+ Insufficient solvation and reorganization around W2 make W1•+←W2 ET endergonic, shifting the equilibrium toward W1•+ and decreasing the charge-separation yield. We suggest that multiscale TDDFT/MM/MD is a suitable technique to model the simultaneous evolution of photogenerated excited-state manifolds.


Asunto(s)
Azurina/química , Triptófano/química , Azurina/genética , Transporte de Electrón , Electrones , Simulación de Dinámica Molecular , Oxidación-Reducción , Fotoquímica , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/metabolismo , Teoría Cuántica , Renio/química , Electricidad Estática , Agua/química
6.
Inorg Chem ; 60(6): 3514-3523, 2021 Mar 15.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33645219

RESUMEN

Ruthenium(II) polypyridyl complexes [Ru(CN-Me-bpy)x(bpy)3-x]2+ (CN-Me-bpy = 4,4'-dicyano-5,5'-dimethyl-2,2'-bipyridine, bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine, and x = 1-3, abbreviated as 12+, 22+, and 32+) undergo four (12+) or five (22+ and 32+) successive one-electron reduction steps between -1.3 and -2.75 V versus ferrocenium/ferrocene (Fc+/Fc) in tetrahydrofuran. The CN-Me-bpy ligands are reduced first, with successive one-electron reductions in 22+ and 32+ being separated by 150-210 mV; reduction of the unsubstituted bpy ligand in 12+ and 22+ occurs only when all CN-Me-bpy ligands have been converted to their radical anions. Absorption spectra of the first three reduction products of each complex were measured across the UV, visible, near-IR (NIR), and mid-IR regions and interpreted with the help of density functional theory calculations. Reduction of the CN-Me-bpy ligand shifts the ν(C≡N) IR band by ca. -45 cm-1, enhances its intensity ∼35 times, and splits the symmetrical and antisymmetrical modes. Semireduced complexes containing two and three CN-derivatized ligands 2+, 3+, and 30 show distinct ν(C≡N) features due to the presence of both CN-Me-bpy and CN-Me-bpy•-, confirming that each reduction is localized on a single ligand. NIR spectra of 10, 1-, and 2- exhibit a prominent band attributable to the CN-Me-bpy•- moiety between 6000 and 7500 cm-1, whereas bpy•--based absorption occurs between 4500 and 6000 cm-1; complexes 2+, 3+, and 30 also exhibit a band at ca. 3300 cm-1 due to a CN-Me-bpy•- → CN-Me-bpy interligand charge-transfer transition. In the UV-vis region, the decrease of π → π* intraligand bands of the neutral ligands and the emergence of the corresponding bands of the radical anions are most diagnostic. The first reduction product of 12+ is spectroscopically similar to the lowest triplet metal-to-ligand charge-transfer excited state, which shows pronounced NIR absorption, and its ν(C≡N) IR band is shifted by -38 cm-1 and 5-7-fold-enhanced relative to the ground state.

7.
J Phys Chem A ; 124(7): 1253-1265, 2020 Feb 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31971382

RESUMEN

Time-resolved femtosecond stimulated Raman spectra (FSRS) of a prototypical organometallic photosensitizer/photocatalyst ReCl(CO)3(2,2'-bipyridine) were measured in a broad spectral range ∼40-2000 (4000) cm-1 at time delays from 40 fs to 4 ns after 400 nm excitation of the lowest allowed electronic transition. Theoretical ground- and excited-state Raman spectra were obtained by anharmonic vibrational analysis using second-order vibrational perturbation theory on vibrations calculated by harmonic approximation at density functional theory-optimized structures. A good match with anharmonically calculated vibrational frequencies allowed for assigning experimental Raman features to particular vibrations. Observed frequency shifts upon excitation (ν(ReCl) and ν(CC inter-ring) vibrations upward; ν(CC, CN) and ν(Re-C) downward) are consistent with the bonding/antibonding characters of the highest occupied molecular orbital and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital involved in excitation and support the delocalized formulation of the lowest triplet state as ReCl(CO)3 → bpy charge transfer. FSRS spectra show a mode-specific temporal evolution, providing insights into the intersystem crossing (ISC) mechanism and subsequent relaxation. Most of the Raman features are present at ∼40 fs and exhibit small shifts and intensity changes with time. The 1450-1600 cm-1 group of bands due to CC, CN, and CC(inter-ring) stretching vibrations undergoes extensive restructuring between 40 and ∼150 fs, followed by frequency upshifts and a biexponential (0.38, 21 ps) area growth, indicating progressing charge separation in the course of the formation and relaxation of the lowest triplet state. Early (40-150 fs) restructuring was also observed in the low-frequency range for ν(Re-Cl) and δ(Re-C-O) vibrations that are presumably activated by ISC. FSRS experimental innovations employed to measure low- and high-energy Raman features simultaneously are described and discussed in detail.

8.
J Phys Chem B ; 124(5): 788-797, 2020 02 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31935093

RESUMEN

Time-resolved phosphorescence spectra of Re(CO)3(dmp)+ and Re(CO)3(phen)+ chromophores (dmp = 4,7-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline, phen = 1,10-phenanthroline) bound to surface histidines (H83, H124, and H126) of Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin mutants exhibit dynamic band maxima shifts to lower wavenumbers following 3-exponential kinetics with 1-5 and 20-100 ns major phases and a 1.1-2.5 µs minor (5-16%) phase. Observation of slow relaxation components was made possible by using an organometallic Re chromophore as a probe whose long phosphorescence lifetime extends the observation window up to ∼3 µs. Integrated emission-band areas also decay with 2- or 3-exponential kinetics; the faster decay phase(s) is relaxation-related, whereas the slowest one [360-680 ns (dmp); 90-140 ns (phen)] arises mainly from population decay. As a result of shifting bands, the emission intensity decay kinetics depend on the detection wavelength. Detailed kinetics analyses and comparisons with band-shift dynamics are needed to disentangle relaxation and population decay kinetics if they occur on comparable timescales. The dynamic phosphorescence Stokes shift in Re-azurins is caused by relaxation motions of the solvent, the protein, and solvated amino acid side chains at the Re binding site in response to chromophore electronic excitation. Comparing relaxation and decay kinetics of Re(dmp)124K122CuII and Re(dmp)124W122CuII suggests that electron transfer (ET) and relaxation motions in the W122 mutant are coupled. It follows that nanosecond and faster photo-induced ET steps in azurins (and likely other redox proteins) occur from unrelaxed systems; importantly, these reactions can be driven (or hindered) by structural and solvational dynamics.


Asunto(s)
Azurina/química , Complejos de Coordinación/química , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/química , Renio/química , Azurina/genética , Ligandos , Luminiscencia , Mediciones Luminiscentes , Mutación , Fenantrolinas/química
9.
ACS Cent Sci ; 5(1): 192-200, 2019 Jan 23.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30693338

RESUMEN

We have constructed and structurally characterized a Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin mutant Re126WWCuI , where two adjacent tryptophan residues (W124 and W122, indole separation 3.6-4.1 Å) are inserted between the CuI center and a Re photosensitizer coordinated to the imidazole of H126 (ReI(H126)(CO)3(4,7-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline)+). CuI oxidation by the photoexcited Re label (*Re) 22.9 Å away proceeds with a ∼70 ns time constant, similar to that of a single-tryptophan mutant (∼40 ns) with a 19.4 Å Re-Cu distance. Time-resolved spectroscopy (luminescence, visible and IR absorption) revealed two rapid reversible electron transfer steps, W124 → *Re (400-475 ps, K 1 ≅ 3.5-4) and W122 → W124•+ (7-9 ns, K 2 ≅ 0.55-0.75), followed by a rate-determining (70-90 ns) CuI oxidation by W122•+ ca. 11 Å away. The photocycle is completed by 120 µs recombination. No photochemical CuI oxidation was observed in Re126FWCuI , whereas in Re126WFCuI , the photocycle is restricted to the ReH126W124 unit and CuI remains isolated. QM/MM/MD simulations of Re126WWCuI indicate that indole solvation changes through the hopping process and W124 → *Re electron transfer is accompanied by water fluctuations that tighten W124 solvation. Our finding that multistep tunneling (hopping) confers a ∼9000-fold advantage over single-step tunneling in the double-tryptophan protein supports the proposal that hole-hopping through tryptophan/tyrosine chains protects enzymes from oxidative damage.

10.
J Phys Chem B ; 123(7): 1578-1591, 2019 02 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30673250

RESUMEN

We have investigated photoinduced hole hopping in a Pseudomonas aeruginosa azurin mutant Re126WWCuI, where two adjacent tryptophan residues (W124 and W122) are inserted between the CuI center and a Re photosensitizer coordinated to a H126 imidazole (Re = ReI(H126)(CO)3(dmp)+, dmp = 4,7-dimethyl-1,10-phenanthroline). Optical excitation of this mutant in aqueous media (≤40 µM) triggers 70 ns electron transport over 23 Å, yielding a long-lived (120 µs) ReI(H126)(CO)3(dmp•-)WWCuII product. The Re126FWCuI mutant (F124, W122) is not redox-active under these conditions. Upon increasing the concentration to 0.2-2 mM, {Re126WWCuI}2 and {Re126FWCuI}2 are formed with the dmp ligand of the Re photooxidant of one molecule in close contact (3.8 Å) with the W122' indole on the neighboring chain. In addition, {Re126WWCuI}2 contains an interfacial tryptophan quadruplex of four indoles (3.3-3.7 Å apart). In both mutants, dimerization opens an intermolecular W122' → //*Re ET channel (// denotes the protein interface, *Re is the optically excited sensitizer). Excited-state relaxation and ET occur together in two steps (time constants of ∼600 ps and ∼8 ns) that lead to a charge-separated state containing a Re(H126)(CO)3(dmp•-)//(W122•+)' unit; then (CuI)' is oxidized intramolecularly (60-90 ns) by (W122•+)', forming ReI(H126)(CO)3(dmp•-)WWCuI//(CuII)'. The photocycle is closed by ∼1.6 µs ReI(H126)(CO)3(dmp•-) → //(CuII)' back ET that occurs over 12 Å, in contrast to the 23 Å, 120 µs step in Re126WWCuI. Importantly, dimerization makes Re126FWCuI photoreactive and, as in the case of {Re126WWCuI}2, channels the photoproduced "hole" to the molecule that was not initially photoexcited, thereby shortening the lifetime of ReI(H126)(CO)3(dmp•-)//CuII. Although two adjacent W124 and W122 indoles dramatically enhance CuI → *Re intramolecular multistep ET, the tryptophan quadruplex in {Re126WWCuI}2 does not accelerate intermolecular electron transport; instead, it acts as a hole storage and crossover unit between inter- and intramolecular ET pathways. Irradiation of {Re126WWCuII}2 or {Re126FWCuII}2 also triggers intermolecular W122' → //*Re ET, and the Re(H126)(CO)3(dmp•-)//(W122•+)' charge-separated state decays to the ground state by ∼50 ns ReI(H126)(CO)3(dmp•-)+ → //(W122•+)' intermolecular charge recombination. Our findings shed light on the factors that control interfacial hole/electron hopping in protein complexes and on the role of aromatic amino acids in accelerating long-range electron transport.


Asunto(s)
Azurina/química , Azurina/genética , Azurina/metabolismo , Cobre/química , Transporte de Electrón , Electrones , Imidazoles/química , Luz , Modelos Moleculares , Mutagénesis , Oxidación-Reducción , Estructura Terciaria de Proteína , Pseudomonas aeruginosa/metabolismo , Teoría Cuántica , Triptófano/química , Agua/química
11.
J Phys Chem A ; 122(40): 7941-7953, 2018 Oct 11.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30265538

RESUMEN

Ultrafast time-resolved electronic and infrared absorption measurements have been carried out on a series of Ru(II) polypyridyl complexes in an effort to delineate the dynamics of vibrational relaxation in this class of charge transfer chromophores. Time-dependent density functional theory calculations performed on compounds of the form [Ru(CN-Me-bpy) x(bpy)3-x]2+ ( x = 1-3 for compounds 1-3, respectively, where CN-Me-bpy is 4,4'-dicyano-5,5'-dimethyl-2,2'-bipyridine and bpy is 2,2'-bipyridine) reveal features in their charge-transfer absorption envelopes that allow for selective excitation of the Ru(II)-(CN-Me-bpy) moiety, the lowest-energy MLCT state(s) in each compound of the series. Changes in band shape and amplitude of the time-resolved differential electronic absorption data are ascribed to vibrational cooling in the CN-Me-bpy-localized 3MLCT state with a time constant of 8 ± 3 ps in all three compounds. This conclusion was corroborated by picosecond time-resolved infrared absorption measurements; sharpening of the CN stretch in the 3MLCT excited state was observed with a time constant of 3.0 ± 1.5 ps in all three members of the series. Electronic absorption data acquired at higher temporal resolution revealed spectral modulation over the first 2 ps occurring with a time constant of τ = 170 ± 50 fs, in compound 1; corresponding effects are significantly attenuated in compound 2 and virtually absent in compound 3. We assign this feature to intramolecular vibrational redistribution (IVR) within the 3MLCT state and represents a rare example of this process being identified from time-resolved electronic absorption data for this important class of chromophores.

12.
J Phys Chem A ; 122(37): 7256-7266, 2018 Sep 20.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30141941

RESUMEN

Excited-state dynamics and electronic structures of Al and Ga corrole complexes were studied as a function of the number of ß-pyrrole iodine substituents. Using spectrally broad-band femtosecond-resolved fluorescence upconversion, we determined the kinetics of the Soret fluorescence decay, the concomitant rise and subsequent decay of the Q-band fluorescence, as well as of the accompanying vibrational relaxation. Iodination was found to accelerate all involved processes. The time constant of the internal conversion from the Soret to the Q states decreases from 320-540 to 70-185 fs upon iodination. Vibrational relaxation then occurs with about 15 and 0.36-1.4 ps lifetime for iodine-free and iodinated complexes, respectively. Intersystem crossing to the lowest triplet is accelerated up to 200 times from nanoseconds to 15-24 ps; its rate correlates with the iodine p(π) participation in the corrole π-system and the spin-orbit coupling (SOC) strength. TDDFT calculations with explicit SOC show that iodination introduces a manifold of low-lying singlet and triplet iodine → corrole charge-transfer (CT) states. These states affect the photophysics by (i) providing a relaxation cascade for the Soret → Q internal conversion and cooling and (ii) opening new SOC pathways whereby CT triplet character is admixed into both Q singlet excited states. In addition, SOC between the higher Q singlet and the Soret triplet is enhanced as the iodine participation in frontier corrole π-orbitals increases. Our observations that iodination of the chromophore periphery affects the whole photocycle by changing the electronic structure, spin-orbit coupling, and the density of states rationalize the "heavy-atom effect" and have implications for controlling excited-state dynamics in a range of triplet photosensitizers.

13.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(28): E6396-E6403, 2018 07 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29941568

RESUMEN

We investigate the ultrafast transient absorption response of tetrakis(µ-pyrophosphito)diplatinate(II), [Pt2(µ-P2O5H2)4]4- [hereafter abbreviated Pt(pop)], in acetonitrile upon excitation of its lowest singlet 1A2u state. Compared with previously reported solvents [van der Veen RM, Cannizzo A, van Mourik F, Vlcek A, Jr, Chergui M (2011) J Am Chem Soc 133:305-315], a significant shortening of the intersystem crossing (ISC) time (<1 ps) from the lowest singlet to the lowest triplet state is found, allowing for a transfer of vibrational coherence, observed in the course of an ISC in a polyatomic molecule in solution. Density functional theory (DFT) quantum mechanical/molecular mechanical (QM/MM) simulations of Pt(pop) in acetonitrile and ethanol show that high-lying, mostly triplet, states are strongly mixed and shifted to lower energies due to interactions with the solvent, providing an intermediate state (or manifold of states) for the ISC. This suggests that the larger the solvation energies of the intermediate state(s), the shorter the ISC time. Because the latter is smaller than the pure dephasing time of the vibrational wave packet, coherence is conserved during the spin transition. These results underscore the crucial role of the solvent in directing pathways of intramolecular energy flow.

14.
J Phys Chem A ; 121(48): 9275-9283, 2017 Dec 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29131954

RESUMEN

Binuclear complexes of d8 metals (PtII, IrI, RhI,) exhibit diverse photonic behavior, including dual emission from relatively long-lived singlet and triplet excited states, as well as photochemical energy, electron, and atom transfer. Time-resolved optical spectroscopic and X-ray studies have revealed the behavior of the dimetallic core, confirming that M-M bonding is strengthened upon dσ* → pσ excitation. We report the bridging ligand dynamics of Ir2(1,8-diisocyanomenthane)42+ (Ir(dimen)), investigated by fs-ns time-resolved IR spectroscopy (TRIR) in the region of C≡N stretching vibrations, ν(C≡N), 2000-2300 cm-1. The ν(C≡N) IR band of the singlet and triplet dσ*pσ excited states is shifted by -22 and -16 cm-1 relative to the ground state due to delocalization of the pσ LUMO over the bridging ligands. Ultrafast relaxation dynamics of the 1dσ*pσ state depend on the initially excited Franck-Condon molecular geometry, whereby the same relaxed singlet excited state is populated by two different pathways depending on the starting point at the excited-state potential energy surface. Exciting the long/eclipsed isomer triggers two-stage structural relaxation: 0.5 ps large-scale Ir-Ir contraction and 5 ps Ir-Ir contraction/intramolecular rotation. Exciting the short/twisted isomer induces a ∼5 ps bond shortening combined with vibrational cooling. Intersystem crossing (70 ps) follows, populating a 3dσ*pσ state that lives for hundreds of nanoseconds. During the first 2 ps, the ν(C≡N) IR bandwidth oscillates with the frequency of the ν(Ir-Ir) wave packet, ca. 80 cm-1, indicating that the dephasing time of the high-frequency (16 fs)-1 C≡N stretch responds to much slower (∼400 fs)-1 Ir-Ir coherent oscillations. We conclude that the bonding and dynamics of bridging di-isocyanide ligands are coupled to the dynamics of the metal-metal unit and that the coherent Ir-Ir motion induced by ultrafast excitation drives vibrational dephasing processes over the entire binuclear cation.

15.
Inorg Chem ; 56(5): 2874-2883, 2017 Mar 06.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28218541

RESUMEN

Molecular and electronic structures of Ir2(1,8-diisocyanomenthane)4n+ (Ir(dimen)n+) complexes have been investigated by DFT for n = 2, 1, 0 (abbreviated 2+, 1+, 0). Calculations reproduced the experimental structure of 2+, ν(C≡N) IR, and visible absorption spectra of all three oxidation states, as well as the EPR spectrum of 1+. We have shown that the two reduction steps correspond to successive filling of the Ir-Ir pσ orbital. Complexes 2+ and 1+ have very similar structures with 1+ having a shorter Ir-Ir distance. The unpaired electron density in 1+ is delocalized along the Ir-Ir axis and over N atoms of the eight C≡N- ligands. The second reduction step 1+ → 0 changes the Ir(CN-)4 coordination geometry at each Ir site from approximately planar to seesaw whereby one -N≡C-Ir-C≡N- moiety is linear and the other bent at the Ir (137°) as well as N (146°) atoms. Although complex 0 is another example of a rare (pσ)2 dimetallic species (after [Pt2(µ-P2O5(BF2)2)4]6-, J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2016, 138, 5699), the redistribution of lower lying occupied molecular orbitals increases electron density predominantly at the bent C≡N- ligands whose N atoms are predicted to be nucleophilic reaction centers.

16.
J Am Chem Soc ; 138(17): 5699-705, 2016 05 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27068652

RESUMEN

A d(8)-d(8) complex [Pt2(µ-P2O5(BF2)4](4-) (abbreviated Pt(pop-BF2)(4-)) undergoes two 1e(-) reductions at E1/2 = -1.68 and Ep = -2.46 V (vs Fc(+)/Fc) producing reduced Pt(pop-BF2)(5-) and superreduced Pt(pop-BF2)(6-) species, respectively. The EPR spectrum of Pt(pop-BF2)(5-) and UV-vis spectra of both the reduced and the superreduced complexes, together with TD-DFT calculations, reveal successive filling of the 6pσ orbital accompanied by gradual strengthening of Pt-Pt bonding interactions and, because of 6pσ delocalization, of Pt-P bonds in the course of the two reductions. Mayer-Millikan Pt-Pt bond orders of 0.173, 0.268, and 0.340 were calculated for the parent, reduced, and superreduced complexes, respectively. The second (5-/6-) reduction is accompanied by a structural distortion that is experimentally manifested by electrochemical irreversibility. Both reduction steps proceed without changing either d(8) Pt electronic configuration, making the superreduced Pt(pop-BF2)(6-) a very rare 6p(2) σ-bonded binuclear complex. However, the Pt-Pt σ bonding interaction is limited by the relatively long bridging-ligand-imposed Pt-Pt distance accompanied by repulsive electronic congestion. Pt(pop-BF2)(4-) is predicted to be a very strong photooxidant (potentials of +1.57 and +0.86 V are estimated for the singlet and triplet dσ*pσ excited states, respectively).

17.
Inorg Chem ; 55(5): 2441-9, 2016 Mar 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26909653

RESUMEN

High-resolution fluorescence, phosphorescence, as well as related excitation spectra, and, in particular, the emission decay behavior of solid [Bu4N]4[Pt2(µ-P2O5(BF2)2)4], abbreviated Pt(pop-BF2), have been investigated over a wide temperature range, 1.3-310 K. We focus on the lowest excited states that result from dσ*pσ (5dz(2)-6pz) excitations, i.e., the singlet state S1 (of (1)A2u symmetry in D4h) and the lowest triplet T1, which splits into spin-orbit substates A1u((3)A2u) and Eu((3)A2u). After optical excitation, an unusually slow intersystem crossing (ISC) is observed. As a consequence, the compound shows efficient dual emission, consisting of blue fluorescence and green phosphorescence with an overall emission quantum yield of ∼ 100% over the investigated temperature range. Our investigation sheds light on this extraordinary dual emission behavior, which is unique for a heavy-atom transition metal compound. Direct ISC processes in Pt(pop-BF2) are largely forbidden due to spin-, symmetry-, and Franck-Condon overlap-restrictions and, therefore, the ISC time is as long as 29 ns for T < 100 K. With temperature increase, two different thermally activated pathways, albeit still relatively slow, are promoted by spin-vibronic and vibronic mechanisms, respectively. Thus, distinct temperature dependence of the ISC processes results and, as a consequence, also of the fluorescence/phosphorescence intensity ratio. The phosphorescence lifetime also is temperature-dependent, reflecting the relative population of the triplet T1 substates Eu and A1u. The highly resolved phosphorescence shows a ∼ 220 cm(-1) red shift below 10 K, attributable to zero-field splitting of 40 cm(-1) plus a promoting vibration of 180 cm(-1).

20.
J Phys Chem A ; 119(40): 10137-46, 2015 Oct 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26367031

RESUMEN

Infrared spectra of [Re(X)(CO)(3)(α-diimine)] (α-diimine = 2,2'-bipyridine, X = Cl, NCS, or pyridylimidazo[1,5-a]pyridine, X = Cl) in the ground and the lowest triplet electronic states were calculated by a global hybrid density functional going beyond the harmonic level by means of second-order vibrational perturbation theory (VPT2) and including bulk solvent effects by the polarizable continuum model (PCM). The full-dimensionality (FD) VPT2 is compared with the reduced-dimensionality (RD) model, where only selected vibrational modes are calculated anharmonically. The simulated difference IR spectra (excited state minus ground state) in the ν(CO) region closely match experimental time-resolved infrared (TRIR) spectra. Very good agreement was also obtained for ground-state spectra in the fingerprint region. In comparison with the harmonic simulated spectra, the calculated anharmonic frequencies are closer to experimental values and do not require scaling when the B3LYP functional is used. Several spectral features due to combination bands have been identified by VPT2 simulations in the ν(CO) spectral region, which are of importance for a correct interpretation of TRIR experiments.


Asunto(s)
2,2'-Dipiridil/química , Compuestos Organometálicos/química , Piridinas/química , Teoría Cuántica , Renio/química , Modelos Moleculares , Espectrofotometría Infrarroja , Vibración
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