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We probed a series of multicomponent electron donor2-donor1-acceptor1 conjugates both experimentally and computationally. The conjugates are based on the light harvester and primary electron-donor zinc-porphyrin (ZnP, donor1) to whose ß positions a secondary electron-donor ferrocene (Fc, donor2) and the primary electron-acceptor C60-fullerene (C60, acceptor1) are attached. Linking all of them via p-phenylene-acetylene/acetylene bridges of different lengths to gain full control over shuttling electrons and holes between C60, ZnP, and Fc is novel. Different charge-separation, charge-transfer, and charge-recombination routes have been demonstrated, both by transient absorption spectroscopy measurements on the femto, pico-, nano-, and microsecond time scales and by multiwavelength and target analyses. The molecular wire-like nature of the p-phenylene-acetylene bridges as a function of C60-ZnP and ZnP-Fc distances is decisive in the context of generating distant and long-lived C60â¢--ZnP-Fcâ¢+ charge-separated states. For the first time, we confirm the presence of two adjacent charge-transfer states, a C60-ZnPâ¢--Fcâ¢+ intermediate in addition to C60â¢--ZnPâ¢+-Fc, en route to the distant C60â¢--ZnP-Fcâ¢+ charge-separated state. Our studies demonstrate how the interplay of changes in the reorganization energy and the damping factor of the molecular bridges, in addition to variation in the solvent polarity, affect the outcome of the charge-transfer and corresponding rate constants. The different regions of the Marcus parabola are highly relevant in this matter: The charge recombination of, for example, the adjacent C60â¢--ZnPâ¢+-Fc charge-separated state is located in the inverted region, while that of the distant C60â¢--ZnP-Fcâ¢+ charge-separated state lies in the normal region. Here, the larger reorganization energy of Fc relative to ZnP makes the difference.
RESUMO
There are notably few literature reports of electron donor-acceptor oligoynes, even though they offer unique opportunities for studying charge transport through "all-carbon" molecular bridges. In this context, the current study focuses on a series of carbazole-(C≡C)n-2,5-diphenyl-1,3,4-oxadiazoles (n = 1-4) as conjugated π-systems in general and explores their photophysical properties in particular. Contrary to the behavior of typical electron donor-acceptor systems, for these oligoynes, the rates of charge recombination after photoexcitation increase with increasing electron donor-acceptor distance. To elucidate this unusual performance, we conducted detailed photophysical and time-dependent density functional theory investigations. Significant delocalization of the molecular orbitals along the bridge indicates that the bridging states come into resonance with either the electron donor or acceptor, thereby accelerating the charge transfer. Moreover, the calculated bond lengths reveal a reduction in bond-length alternation upon photoexcitation, indicating significant cumulenic character of the bridge in the excited state. In short, strong vibronic coupling between the electron-donating N-arylcarbazoles and the electron-accepting 1,3,4-oxadiazoles accelerates the charge recombination as the oligoyne becomes longer.
RESUMO
In the scientific race to build up photoactive electron donor-acceptor systems with increasing efficiencies, little is known about the interplay of their building blocks when integrated into supramolecular nanoscale arrays, particularly in aqueous environments. Here, we describe an aqueous donor-acceptor ensemble whose emergence as a nanoscale material renders it remarkably stable and efficient. We have focused on a tetracationic zinc phthalocyanine (ZnPc) featuring pyrenes, which shows an unprecedented mode of aggregation, driven by subtle cooperation between electrostatic and π-π interactions. Our studies demonstrate monocrystalline growth in solution and a symmetry-breaking intermolecular charge transfer between adjacent ZnPcs upon photoexcitation. Immobilizing a negatively charged fullerene (C60 ) as electron acceptor onto the monocrystalline ZnPc assemblies was found to enhance the overall stability, and to suppress the energy-wasting charge recombination found in the absence of C60 . Overall, the resulting artificial photosynthetic model system exhibits a high degree of preorganization, which facilitates efficient charge separation and subsequent charge transport.
RESUMO
Different water-soluble perylenediimides (PDIs) have been used to individualize and stabilize single-walled carbon nanotubes (SWCNTs) in aqueous media. A key feature of the PDIs is that they can be substituted at the bay positions via the addition of two and/or four bromines. This enables control over structural and electronic PDI characteristics, which prompted us to conduct comparative assays with focus on SWCNTs' chirality and charge transfer. Electrochemical, microscopic, and spectroscopic experiments were used to investigate the SWCNT chiral selectivity of PDIs, on the one hand, and charge-transfer reactions between SWCNTs and PDIs, on the other hand.
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We report on a series of electron donor-acceptor conjugates incorporating a ZnII -porphyrin-based electron donor and a variety of non-conjugated rigid linkers connecting to push-pull chromophores as electron acceptors. The electron acceptors comprize multicyanobutadienes or extended tetracyanoquinodimethane analogues with first reduction potentials ranging from -1.67 to -0.23â V vs. Fc+ /Fc in CH2 Cl2 , which are accessible through a final-step cycloaddition-retroelectrocyclization (CA-RE) reaction. Characterization of the conjugates includes electrochemistry, spectroelectrochemistry, DFT calculations, and photophysical measurements in a range of solvents. The collected data allows for the construction of multiple Marcus curves that consider electron-acceptor strength, linker length, and solvent, with data points extending well into the inverted region. The enhancement of electron-vibration couplings, resulting from the rigid spacers and, in particular, multicyano-groups in the conformationally highly fixed push-pull acceptor chromophores affects the charge-recombination kinetics in the inverted region drastically.
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Hybrid covalent/supramolecular porphyrin-fullerene structures were synthesized as highly efficient molecular wires with a remarkably low attenuation factor (ß=0.07±0.01â Å-1 ). Hydrogen-bonding interactions and p-phenylene oligomers of different lengths are responsible for efficient electron transfer in the molecular wires.
RESUMO
The investigation of molecular model systems is fundamental towards a deeper understanding of key photochemical steps in natural photosynthesis. Herein, we report an entirely non-covalent triad consisting of boron dipyrromethene (BDP), porphyrin (ZnP), and fullerene (C60). Non-covalent binding motifs such as an amidinium-carboxylate salt bridge as well as axial pyridyl-metal coordination offer substantial electronic coupling and establish efficient pathways for photoactivated energy and electron transfer processes along a well-tuned gradient. Experimental findings from steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopic assays, as well as (spectro-)electrochemical measurements corroborate the formation of BDP|ZnP|C60 in solution, on one hand, and significant communication in the excited states, on the other hand. BDP acts as an energy harvesting antenna towards ZnP, which eventually undergoes charge separation with C60 by electron transfer from ZnP to C60. Notably, full spectral deconvolution of the transient species was achieved, supporting the successful self-assembly as well as giving a clear view onto the occurring photophysical processes and their spectral footprints upon photoexcitation.
RESUMO
Here, we present a novel butadiyne-linked HBC-ethynyl-porphyrin dimer, which exhibits in the ground state strong absorption cross sections throughout the UV and visible ranges of the solar spectrum. In short, a unidirectional flow of excited state energy from the HBC termini to the (metallo)porphyrin focal points enables concentrating light at the latter. Control over excitonic interactions within, for example, the electron-donating porphyrin dimers was realized by complexation of bidentate ligands to set up panchromatic absorption that extends all the way into the near-infrared range. The bidentate binding motif was then exploited to create a supramolecular electron donor-acceptor assembly based on a HBC-ethynyl-porphyrin dimer and an electron accepting bis(aminoalkyl)-substituted fullerene. Of great relevance is the fact that charge separation from the photoexcited HBC-ethynyl-porphyrin dimer to the bis(aminoalkyl)-substituted fullerene is activated not only upon photoexciting the HBCs in the UV as well as the (metallo)porphyrins in the visible but also in the NIR. Implicit is the synergetic interplay of energy and charge transfer in a photosynthetic mimicking manner. The dimer and bis-HBC-ethynyl-porphyrin monomers, which serve as references, were probed by means of steady-state as well as time-resolved optical spectroscopies, including global target analyses of the time-resolved transient absorption data.
RESUMO
The current work focuses on self-assembled nano-architectures in which metal-ligand coordination between a zinc tetraphenyl-porphyrin (ZnP) and a zinc tetrakis(4-((1,3-dithiol-2-ylidene)methyl)phenyl)-porphyrin (ZnP-TDP), as electron donors, and functionalized fullerenes (C60) featuring different conjugated pyridine substituents as electron acceptors have been designed and investigated. Stoichiometric ratios and binding constants were derived from absorption and fluorescence measurements. Important insight into the free-energy change of charge separation and recombination was obtained from differential pulse voltammetry studies. Compelling evidence for energy transfer, charge separation and recombination was obtained from femtosecond and nanosecond transient-absorption measurements in a wide temperature range. Intramolecular energy transfer is found to take place from TDP to ZnP followed by intramolecular charge transfer from ZnP to C60. Semiempirical and density-functional theory calculations were used to help understand the excited-state deactivation mechanisms.
RESUMO
The photophysical properties of Ruthenium-bipyridine complexes bearing a bibenzimidazole ligand were investigated. The nitrogens on the bibenzimidazole-ligand were protected, by adding either a phenylene group or a 1,2-ethandiyl group, to remove the photophysical dependence of the complex on the protonation state of the bibenzimidazole ligand. This protection results in the bibenzimidazole ligand contributing to the MLCT transition, which is experimentally evidenced by (resonance) Raman scattering in concert with DFT calculations for a detailed mode assignment in the (resonance) Raman spectra.