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1.
The luminescent complex Pt(dpphen)bis(arylacetylide) complex (1) (dpphen = 4,7-diphenylphenanthroline and arylacetylide = 4-ethynylbenzaldehyde) has been synthesized and characterized structurally and spectroscopically. Complex 1 has been employed in the synthesis of donor-chromophore (D-C) dyads through Schiff base condensations of different anilines to give imine-linked dyads 2-4 and through imine reduction with borohydride, to give the corresponding amine-linked dyads 2a-4a. Crystal structure determinations of 1-4 and 4a establish a distorted square-planar geometry around the Pt(II) ion in each system with cis arylacetylide ligands and a diimine-constrained N-Pt-N bond angle of ca. 79.5 degrees. Complex 1 is strongly emissive having a relative quantum yield (phi) of 36% and an excited-state lifetime of 3.1 micros. In accord with the notion of photoinduced electron transfer from the aniline-based donor to the photoexcited chromophore, the emission of dyads 2-4 and 2a-4a is effectively quenched in all solvents tested. The intense absorption at 400 nm (30000-70000 L/mol.cm) for 2 and 2a has been assigned as an intraligand pi-pi* transition, whereas the lowest-energy transitions for all other dyads correspond to Pt-to-pi(diimine) MLCT transitions. Although the dyads can be synthesized in a facile manner, photolysis experiments reveal that both the imine and amine linkages are photochemically unstable, resulting in hydrolysis and regeneration of the aldehyde-containing chromophore 1.  相似文献   

2.
Photoinduced electron transfer in two molecular triads comprised of a triarylamine donor, a d(6) metal diimine photosensitizer, and a 9,10-anthraquinone acceptor was investigated with particular focus on the influence of hydrogen-bonding solvents on the electron transfer kinetics. Photoexcitation of the ruthenium(II) and osmium(II) sensitizers of these triads leads to charge-separated states containing an oxidized triarylamine unit and a reduced anthraquinone moiety. The kinetics for formation of these charge-separated states were explored by using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Strong hydrogen bond donors such as hexafluoroisopropanol or trifluoroethanol cause a thermodynamic and kinetic stabilization of these charge-separated states that is attributed to hydrogen bonding between alcoholic solvent and reduced anthraquinone. In the ruthenium triad this effect leads to a lengthening of the lifetime of the charge-separated state from ~750 ns in dichloromethane to ~3000 ns in hexafluoroisopropanol while in the osmium triad the respective lifetime increases from ~50 to ~2000 ns between the same two solvents. In both triads the lifetime of the charge-separated state correlates with the hydrogen bond donor strength of the solvent but not with the solvent dielectric constant. These findings are relevant in the greater context of solar energy conversion in which one is interested in storing light energy in charge-separated states that are as long-lived as possible. Furthermore they are relevant for understanding proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) reactivity of electronically excited states at a fundamental level because changes in hydrogen-bonding strength accompanying changes in redox states may be regarded as an attenuated form of PCET.  相似文献   

3.
The synthesis of two series of peptidic chains composed of bis(terpyridine)ruthenium(II) acceptor units and organic chromophores (coumarin, naphthalene, anthracene, fluorene) by stepwise solid‐phase peptide synthesis (SPPS) techniques is described. The first series of dyads comprises directly amide linked chromophores, while the second one possesses a glycine spacer between the two chromophores. All dyads were studied by UV/Vis and NMR spectroscopy, steady‐state luminescence, luminescence decay and electrochemistry, as well as by DFT calculations. The results of these studies indicate weak electronic coupling of the chromophores in the ground state. Absorpion spectra of all dyads are dominated by metal‐to‐ligand charge‐transfer (MLCT) bands around 500 nm. The bichromophoric systems, especially with coumarin as organic chromophore, display additional strong absorptions in the visible spectral region. All complexes are luminescent at room temperature (3MLCT). Efficient quenching of the fluorescence of the organic chromophore by the attached ruthenium complex is observed in all dyads. Excitation spectra indicate energy transfer from the organic dye to the ruthenium chromophore.  相似文献   

4.
Supramolecular triad assemblies consisting of a central trisbipyridine ruthenium(II) chromophore (C2+) with one or more appended phenothiazine electron donors (D) and a diquat-type electron acceptor (A2+) have been shown to form long-lived photoinduced charge separated states (CSS) with unusually and consistently high quantum efficiency. Up to now, there has been no understanding for why these large efficiencies (often close to unity) are achieved across this entire class of triads when other, seemingly similar systems are often much less efficient. In the present study, using a bimolecular system consisting of a chromophore-acceptor diad (C2+-A2+) and an N-methylphenothiazine donor, we demonstrate that a ground-state association exists between the RuL3(2+) and the phenothiazine prior to photoexcitation. It is this association process that is responsible for the efficient CSS formation in the bimolecular system and, by inference, also must be an essential factor in the fully intramolecular process occurring with the D-C2+-A2+ triad analogues.  相似文献   

5.
A rigid rod-like organic molecular ensemble comprised of a triarylamine electron donor, a 2,2'-bipyridine (bpy) ligand, and a 9,10-anthraquinone acceptor was synthesized and reacted with suitable metal precursors to yield triads with Ru(bpy)(3)(2+), Os(bpy)(3)(2+), and [Ir(2-(p-tolyl)pyridine)(2)(bpy)](+) photosensitizers. Photoexcitation of these triads leads to long-lived charge-separated states (τ = 80-1300 ns) containing a triarylamine cation and an anthraquinone anion, as observed by transient absorption spectroscopy. From a combined electrochemical and optical spectroscopic study, the thermodynamics and kinetics for the individual photoinduced charge-separation and thermal charge-recombination events were determined; in some cases, measurements on suitable donor-sensitizer or sensitizer-acceptor dyads were necessary. In the case of the ruthenium and iridium triads, the fully charge-separated state is formed in nearly quantitative yield.  相似文献   

6.
A general route for synthesis of six structurally similar Pt(II) diimine thiolate/phenolates chromophores possessing bulky phenolate or thiolate ligands is reported. The Pt chromophores were characterized using an array of techniques including 1H, 13C, and 195Pt NMR, absorption, emission, (spectro)electrochemistry, and EPR spectroscopy. Systematic variation of the electronic structure of the Pt(II) chromophores studied was achieved by (i) changing solvent polarity; (ii) substituting oxygen for sulfur in the donor ligand; (iii) alternating donor ligands from bis- to di-coordination; and (iv) changing the electron donating/withdrawing properties of the ligand(s). The lowest excited state in these new chromophores was assigned to a [charge-transfer-to-diimine] transition from the HOMO of mixed Pt/S (or Pt/O) character on the basis of absorption and emission spectroscopy, UV/vis (spectro)electrochemistry, and EPR spectroscopy. One of the chromophores, Pt(dpphen)(3,5-di-tert-butyl-catecholate) represents an example of a Pt(II) diimine phenolate chromophore that possesses a reversible oxidation centered predominantly on the donor ligand. Results from EPR spectroscopy indicate participation of the Pt(II) orbitals in the HOMO. There is a dramatic difference in the photophysical properties of carborane complexes compared to other mixed-ligand Pt(II) compounds, which includes room-temperature emission and photostability. The charge-transfer character of the lowest excited state in this series of chromophores is maintained throughout. Moreover, the absorption and emission energies and the redox properties of the excited state can be significantly tuned.  相似文献   

7.
The dyads 3, 4, and 6, combining the Bodipy chromophore with a Pt(bpy)(bdt) (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine, bdt = 1,2-benzenedithiolate, 3 and 6) or a Pt(bpy)(mnt) (mnt = maleonitriledithiolate, 4) moiety, have been synthesized and studied by UV-vis steady-state absorption, transient absorption, and emission spectroscopies and cyclic voltammetry. Comparison of the absorption spectra and cyclic voltammograms of dyads 3, 4, and 6 and those of their model compounds 1a, 2, 5, and 7 shows that the spectroscopic and electrochemical properties of the dyads are essentially the sum of their constituent chromophores, indicating negligible interaction of the constituent chromophores in the ground state. However, emission studies on 3 and 6 show a complete absence of both Bodipy-based fluorescence and the characteristic luminescence of the Pt(bpy)(bdt) unit. Dyad 4 shows a weak Pt(mnt)-based emission. Transient absorption studies show that excitation of the dyads into the Bodipy-based (1)ππ* excited state is followed by singlet energy transfer (SEnT) to the Pt(dithiolate)-based (1)MMLL'CT (mixed metal-ligand to ligand charge transfer) excited state ([Formula: see text] = 0.6 ps, [Formula: see text] = 0.5 ps, and [Formula: see text] = 1.6 ps), which undergoes rapid intersystem crossing to the (3)MMLL'CT state due to the heavy Pt(II) ion. The (3)MMLL'CT state is then depopulated by triplet energy transfer (TEnT) to the low-lying Bodipy-based (3)ππ* excited state ([Formula: see text] = 8.2 ps, [Formula: see text] = 5 ps, and [Formula: see text] = 160 ps). The transition assignments are supported by TD-DFT calculations. Both energy-transfer processes are shown to proceed via a Dexter electron exchange mechanism. The much longer time constants for dyad 6 relative to 3 are attributed to the significantly poorer coupling and resonance of charge-separated species that are intermediates in the electron exchange process.  相似文献   

8.
A near-IR-emitting sensitizer, boron-chelated tetraarylazadipyrromethane, has been utilized as an electron acceptor to synthesize a series of dyads and triads linked with a well-known electron donor, ferrocene. The structural integrity of the newly synthesized dyads and triads was established by spectroscopic, electrochemical, and computational methods. The DFT calculations revealed a 'molecular clip'-type structure for the triads wherein the donor and acceptor entities were separated by about 14 ?. Differential pulse voltammetry combined with spectroelectrochemical studies have revealed the redox states and estimated the energies of the charge-separated states. Free-energy calculations revealed the charge separation from the covalently linked ferrocene to the singlet excited ADP to yield Fc(+)-ADP(?-) to be energetically favorable. Consequently, the steady-state emission studies revealed quantitative quenching of the ADP fluorescence in all of the investigated dyads and triads. Femtosecond laser flash photolysis studies provided concrete evidence for the occurrence of photoinduced electron transfer in these donor-acceptor systems by providing spectral proof for formation of ADP radical anion (ADP(?-)) which exhibits a diagnostic absorption band in the near-IR region. The kinetics of charge separation and charge recombination measured by monitoring the rise and decay of the ADP(?-) band revealed ultrafast charge separation in these molecular systems. The charge-separation performance of the triads with two ferrocenes and a fluorophenyl-modified ADP macrocycle was found to be superior. Nanosecond transient absorption studies revealed the charge-recombination process to populate the triplet ADP as well as the ground state.  相似文献   

9.
Fullerenes have been used successfully in the covalent assembly of supramolecular systems that mimic some of the electron transfer steps of photosynthetic reaction centers. In these constructs C60 is most often used as the primary electron acceptor; it is linked to cyclic tetrapyrroles or other chromophores which act as primary electron donors in photoinduced electron transfer processes. In artificial photosynthetic systems, fullerenes exhibit several differences from the superficially more biomimetic quinone electron acceptors. The lifetime of the initial charge-separated state in fullerene-based molecules is, in general, considerably longer than in comparable systems containing quinones. Moreover, photoinduced electron transfer processes take place in non-polar solvents and at low temperature in frozen glasses in a number of fullerene-based dyads and triads. These features are unusual in photosynthetic model systems that employ electron acceptors such as quinones, and are more reminiscent of electron transfer in natural reaction centers. This behavior can be attributed to a reduced sensitivity of the fullerene radical anion to solvent charge stabilization effects and small internal and solvent reorganization energies for electron transfer in the fullerene systems, relative to quinone-based systems.  相似文献   

10.
New Pt(II) diimine bis(acetylide) complexes where the diimine is a substituted bipyridine or phenanthroline and the arylacetylide is 4-ethynylbenzaldehyde have been prepared in good to excellent yields. Spectroscopic characterization supports a square planar coordination geometry with cis-alkynyl ligands, and the crystal structure of one of the complexes, Pt(phen)(Ctbd1;CC(6)H(4)CHO)(2) (1), confirms the assignment. The new diimine bis(acetylide) complexes exhibit an absorption band ca. 400 nm that corresponds to a Pt(d) --> pi diimine charge transfer transition and are brightly emissive in fluid solution, with excited state lifetimes in the range 100-800 ns. Correlation of diimine substituent with lambda(max) for the 400 nm absorption band gives strong support to the MLCT assignment. Complex 1 undergoes electron transfer quenching, showing good Stern-Volmer behavior with a variety of oxidative and reductive quenchers. Quenching studies conducted with DNA nucleosides (A, T, C, G) were also investigated. Silyl-protected adenosine and guanosine were found to quench the luminescence of 1 better than similarly protected cytidine or thymidine. Since the former are the more easily oxidized bases, the results suggest that the Pt(II) diimine bis(acetylide) complexes are more powerful photooxidants than photoreductants with regard to electron transfer to DNA bases.  相似文献   

11.
Long-lived charge-separated states in the ns to [micro sign]s range were observed upon laser flash excitation of a donor-chromophore-acceptor triad based on tris(bipyridine) ruthenium(ii) as photo-sensitizer, naphthalene diimide as acceptor, and a hydrogen bonded phenol as donor.  相似文献   

12.
Systematic series of indium tin oxide (ITO) electrodes modified covalently with self-assembled monolayers (SAMs) of ferrocene-porphyrin-fullerene triads and porphyrin-fullerene dyads were designed to gain valuable insight into the development of molecular photovoltaic devices. The structures of SAMs on ITO have been investigated by UV/Vis absorption spectroscopy, atomic force microscopy, and cyclic voltammetry. The photoelectrochemical and photophysical (fluorescence lifetime and time-resolved transient absorption) properties were also determined. The highest quantum yield of photocurrent generation (11 %) among donor-acceptor linked systems which are covalently attached to the surface of ITO electrodes was achieved with SAMs of ferrocene-zinc porphyrin-fullerene linked triad on ITO electrodes. The quantum yields of photocurrent generation correlate well with the charge-separation efficiency and the lifetime of the charge-separated state of the porphyrin-fullerene linked systems in solution. These results provide valuable information for the construction of photonic molecular devices and artificial photosynthetic systems on ITO electrodes.  相似文献   

13.
Electron and energy transfer reactions of porphyrin-porphyrin-fullerene triads (P2P1C) with controllable sandwich-like structures have been studied using spectroscopic and electrochemical methods. The stabile, stacked structure of the molecules was achieved applying a two-linker strategy developed previously for porphyrin-fullerene dyads. Different triad structures with altered linker positions, linker lengths, and center atoms of the porphyrin rings were studied. The final charge-separated (CS) state and the different transient states of the reactions have been identified and energies of the states estimated based on the experimental results. In particular, a complete CS state P2(+) P1C- was achieved in a zinc porphyrin-free-base porphyrin-fullerene triad (ZnP2t9P1C) in both polar (benzonitrile) and nonpolar (toluene) solvents. The lifetime of this state was longer living in the nonpolar solvent. An outstanding feature of the ZnP2t9P1C triad is the extremely fast formation of the final CS state, P2(+) P1C-. This state is formed after primary excitation of either zinc porphyrin or free-base porphyrin chromophores in less than 200 fs. Although the intermediate steps between the locally excited states and the final CS state were not time-resolved for this compound, the process is clearly multistep and the fastest ever observed for porphyrin-based compounds.  相似文献   

14.
This work describes a comprehensive assignment of the vibrational spectra of the platinum(II) diimine bisthiolate and chloride complexes as a prototype structure for a diversity of Pt(II) diimine chromophores. The dynamics and energy dissipation pathways in excited states of light harvesting molecules relies largely on the coupling between the high frequency and the low frequency modes. As such, the assignment of the vibrational spectrum of the chromophore is of utmost importance, especially in the low-frequency region, below 500 cm(-1), where the key metal-ligand framework modes occur. This region is experimentally difficult to access with infrared spectroscopy and hence frequently remains elusive. However, this region is easily accessible with Raman and inelastic neutron scattering (INS) spectroscopies. Accordingly, a combination of inelastic neutron scattering and Raman spectroscopy with the aid of computational results from periodic-DFT and the mode visualizations, as well as isotopic substitution, allowed for an identification of the modes that contain significant contributions from Pt-Cl, Pt-S, and Pt-N stretch modes. The results also demonstrate that it is not possible to assign transition energies to "pure", localized modes in the low frequency region, as a consequence of the anticipated severe coupling that occurs among the skeletal modes. The use of INS has proved invaluable in identifying and assigning the modes in the lowest frequency region, and overall the results will be of assistance in analyzing the structure of the electronic excited state in the families of chromophores containing a Pt(diimine) core.  相似文献   

15.
Novel pi-extended tetrathiafulvalene (exTTF)-based donor acceptor hybrids-dyads and triads-have been synthesized following a multistep synthetic procedure. Cyclic voltammetry and absorption spectroscopy, conducted in room temperature solutions, reveal features that are identical to the sum of the separate donor and acceptor moieties. Steady-state and time-resolved photolytic techniques confirm that upon photoexcitation of the fullerene chromophore, rapid (1.25 x 10(10) s(-1)) and efficient (67 %) charge separation leads to long-lived, charge-separated radical pairs. Typical lifetimes for the dyad ensembles range between 54 and 460 ns, with the longer values found in more polar solvents. This indicates that the dynamics are located in the 'normal region' of the Marcus curve. In the triads, subsequent charge shifts transform the adjacent radical pair into the distant radical pair, for which we determined lifetimes of up to 111 micros in DMF-values never previously accomplished in molecular triads. In the final charge-separated state, large donor-acceptor separation (center-to-center distances: approximately 30 A) minimizes the coupling between reduced acceptor and oxidized donor. Analysis of the charge recombination kinetics shows that a stepwise mechanism accounts for the unusually long lifetimes.  相似文献   

16.
Fan Y  Zhang LY  Dai FR  Shi LX  Chen ZN 《Inorganic chemistry》2008,47(7):2811-2819
When 3-ethynyl-1,10-phenanthroline (HCCphen) or 3,8-diethynyl-1,10-phenanthroline (HCCphenCCH) is utilized as a bifunctional bridging ligand via stepwise molecular fabrication, a series of Pt-Ru and Pt-Re heteronuclear complexes composed of both platinum(II) terpyridyl acetylide chromophores and a Ru(phen)(bpy)2/Re(phen)(CO)3Cl subunit were prepared by complexation of one or two Pt((t)Bu3tpy)(2+) units to the mononuclear Ru(II) or Re(I) precursor through platinum acetylide sigma coordination. These Pt-Ru and Pt-Re complexes exhibit intense low-energy absorptions originating from both Pt- and Ru (Re)-based metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) states in the near-visible region. They are strongly luminescent in both solid states and fluid solutions with a submicrosecond range of lifetimes and 0.27-6.58% of quantum yields in degassed acetonitrile. For the Pt-Ru heteronuclear complexes, effective intercomponent Pt --> Ru energy transfer takes place from the platinum(II) terpyridyl acetylide chromophores to the ruthenium(II) tris(diimine)-based emitters. In contrast, dual emission from both Pt- and Re-based (3)MLCT excited states occurs because of less efficient intercomponent Pt --> Re energy transfer in the Pt-Re heteronuclear complexes.  相似文献   

17.
Photoinduced charge separation (CS) and charge recombination (CR) processes have been examined in various porphyrin-fullerene linked systems (i.e., dyads and triads) by means of time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy and fluorescence lifetime measurements. The investigated compounds comprise a homologous series of rigidly linked, linear donor-acceptor arrays with different donor-acceptor separations and diversified donor strength: freebase porphyrin-C60 dyad (H2P-C60), zincporphyrin-C60 dyad (ZnP-C60), ferrocene-zincporphyrin-C60 triad (Fc-ZnP-C60), ferrocene-freebase porphyrin-C60 triad (Fc-H2P-C60), and zincporphyrin-freebase porphyrin-C60 triad (ZnP-H2P-C60). Most importantly, the lowest lying charge-separated state of all the investigated systems, namely, that of ferrocenium ion (Fc+) and the C60 radical anion (C60.-) pair in the Fc-ZnP-C60 triad, has been generated with the highest quantum yields (close to unity) and reveals a lifetime as long as 16 micros. Determination of CS and CR rate constants, together with the one-electron redox potentials of the donor and acceptor moieties in different solvents, has allowed us to examine the driving force dependence (-DeltaG0ET) of the electron-transfer rate constants (kET). Hereby, the semilogarithmic plots (i.e., log kET versus -DeltaG0ET) lead to the evaluation of the reorganization energy (lambda) and the electronic coupling matrix element (V) in light of the Marcus theory of electron-transfer reactions: lambda = 0.66 eV and V = 3.9 cm(-1) for ZnP-C60 dyad and lambda = 1.09 eV and V = 0.019 cm(-1) for Fc-ZnP-C60, Fc-H2P-C60, and ZnP-H2P-C60 triads. Interestingly, the Marcus plot in Fc-ZnP-C60, Fc-H2P-C60, and ZnP-H2P-C60 has provided clear evidence for intramolecular CR located in both the normal and inverted regions of the Marcus parabola. The coefficient for the distance dependence of V (damping factor: betaCR = 0.58 A(-1) is deduced which depends primarily on the nature of the bridging molecule.  相似文献   

18.
A triad D-Ir-A, where Ir is an Ir(III) bisterpyridine complex connected through an amidophenyl spacer to D, a triphenylamine electron donor, and to A, a naphthalene bisimide electron acceptor, has been synthesized and electrochemically investigated. The photoinduced processes in the triad, which is more than 4-nm long, have been characterized by steady-state and time-resolved optical spectroscopy by comparison with the model dyads D-Ir, Ir-A, and the reference monomers D, Ir, and A. A sequential electron transfer occurs upon excitation of the D and Ir units, leading to the charge-separated state D+-Ir- -A in 100 % yield and subsequently to D+-Ir-A- in about 10 % yield. The final charge-separated state has a lifetime at room temperature of 120 micros in air-free acetonitrile and of 100 micros in air-equilibrated solvent. Excitation of the A units does not yield intramolecular reactivity, but the resulting triplet-excited state localized on the acceptor, D-Ir-3A, displays intermolecular reactivity.  相似文献   

19.
The unsaturated cyclic [M3(dppm)3(CO)](2+) clusters (M = Pt, Pd; dppm = Ph2PCH2PPh2; such as PF6(-) salt) exhibit a cavity formed by the six dppm-phenyl groups placed like a picket fence above the unsaturated triangular M3 dicationic center. Electrostatic interactions of the M(3+) units inside this cavity with the carboxylate anion RCO2(-) [R = tetraphenylporphyrinatozinc(II), ZnTPP; p-phenyltritolylporphyrinatozinc(II), ZnTTPP; p-phenyltritolylporphyrinatopalladium(II), PdTTPP] form dyads for through-space triplet energy transfers. The binding constants are on the order of 20,000 M(-1) in all six cases (298 K). The energy diagram built upon absorption and emission spectra at 298 and 77 K places the [Pt3(dppm)3(CO)](2+) and [Pd3(dppm)3(CO)](2+) as triplet energy donors, respectively, with respect to the ZnTPPCO2(-), ZnTTPPCO2(-), and PdTTPPCO2(-) pigments, which act as acceptors. Evidence for energy transfer is provided by the transient absorption spectra at 298 K, where triplet-triplet absorption bands of the metalloporphyrin chromophores are depicted at all time (at 298 K) with total absence of the charge-separated state in the nanosecond to microsecond time scale. Rates for energy transfer (ranging in the 10(4) s(-1) time scale) are extracted from the emission lifetimes of the [Pt3(dppm)3(CO)](2+) donor in the free chromophore and the host-guest assemblies. The emission intensity of [Pd3(dppm)3(CO)](2+) is too weak to measure its spectrum and emission lifetime in the presence of the strongly luminescent metalloporphyrin-containing materials. For the [Pd3(dppm)3(CO)](2+)...metalloporphyrin dyads, evidence for fluorescence and phosphorescence lifetime quenching of the porphyrin chromophore at 298 K is provided. These quenchings, exhibiting rates of 10(4) (triplet) and 10(8) s(-1) (singlet), are attributed to a photoinduced electron transfer from the metalloporphyrin to the cluster due to the low reduction potential.  相似文献   

20.
Two electron donor-acceptor triads based on a benzoquinone acceptor linked to a light absorbing [Ru(bpy)(3)](2+) complex have been synthesized. In triad 6 (denoted Ru(II)-BQ-Co(III)), a [Co(bpy)(3)](3+) complex, a potential secondary acceptor, was linked to the quinone. In the other triad, 8 (denoted PTZ-Ru(II)-BQ), a phenothiazine donor was linked to the ruthenium moiety. The corresponding dyads Ru(II)-BQ (4) and PTZ-Ru(II) (9) were prepared for comparison. Upon light excitation in the visible band of the ruthenium moiety, electron transfer to the quinone occurred with a rate constant k(f) = 5 x 10(9) s(-)(1) (tau(f) = 200 ps) in all the quinone containing complexes. Recombination to the ground state followed, with a rate constant k(b) approximately 4.5 x 10(8) s(-)(1) (tau(b) approximately 2.2 ns), for both Ru(II)-BQ and Ru(II)-BQ-Co(III) with no indication of a charge shift to generate the reduced Co(II) moiety. In the PTZ-Ru(II)-BQ triad, however, the initial charge separation was followed by a rapid (k > 5 x 10(9) s(-)(1)) electron transfer from the phenothiazine moiety to give the fairly long-lived PTZ(*)(+)-Ru(II)-BQ(*)(-) state (tau = 80 ns) in unusually high yield for a [Ru(bpy)(3)](2+)-based triad (> 90%), that lies at DeltaG degrees = 1.32 eV relative to the ground state. Unfortunately, this triad turned out to be rather photolabile. Interestingly, coupling between the oxidized PTZ(*)(+) and the BQ(*)(-) moieties seemed to occur. This discouraged further extension to incorporate more redox active units. Finally, in the dyad PTZ-Ru(II) a reversible, near isoergonic electron transfer was observed on excitation. Thus, a quasiequilibrium was established with an observed time constant of 7 ns, with ca. 82% of the population in the PTZ-Ru(II) state and 18% in the PTZ(*)(+)-Ru(II)(bpy(*)(-)) state. These states decayed in parallel with an observed lifetime of 90 ns. The initial electron transfer to form the PTZ(*)(+)-Ru(II)(bpy(*)(-)) state was thus faster than what would have been inferred from the Ru(II) emission decay (tau = 90 ns). This result suggests that reports for related PTZ-Ru(II) and PTZ-Ru(II)-acceptor complexes in the literature might need to be reconsidered.  相似文献   

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