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1.
To mimic the electron-donor side of photosystem II (PSII), three trinuclear ruthenium complexes (2, 2a, 2b) were synthesized. In these complexes, a mixed-valent dinuclear Ru2(II,III) moiety with one phenoxy and two acetato bridges is covalently linked to a Ru(II) tris-bipyridine photosensitizer. The properties and photoinduced electron/energy transfer of these complexes were studied. The results show that the Ru2(II,III) moieties in the complexes readily undergo reversible one-electron reduction and one-electron oxidation to give the Ru2(II,III) and Ru2(III,III) states, respectively. This could allow for photooxidation of the sensitizer part with an external acceptor and subsequent electron transfer from the dinuclear ruthenium moiety to regenerate the sensitizer. However, all trinuclear ruthenium complexes have a very short excited-state lifetime, in the range of a few nanoseconds to less than 100 ps. Studies by femtosecond time-resolved techniques suggest that a mixture of intramolecular energy and electron transfer between the dinuclear ruthenium moiety and the excited [Ru(bpy)3]2+ photosensitizer is responsible for the short lifetimes. This problem is overcome by anchoring the complexes with ester- or carboxyl-substituted bipyridine ligands (2a, 2b) to nanocrystalline TiO2, and the desired electron transfer from the excited state of the [Ru(bpy)3]2+ moiety to the conduction band of TiO2 followed by intramolecular electron transfer from the dinuclear Ru2(II,III) moiety to photogenerated Ru(III) was observed. The resulting long-lived Ru2(III,III) state decays on the millisecond timescale.  相似文献   

2.
The paper describes recent advances towards the construction of functional mimics of the oxygen evolving complex in photosystem II (PSII) that are coupled to photoinduced charge separation. Some key principles of PSII and artificial systems for light-induced charge accumulation are discussed. Systems are described where biomimetic electron donors--manganese complexes and tyrosine--have been linked to a Ru(II)-polypyridine photosensitiser. Oxidation of the donors by intramolecular electron transfer from the photo-oxidised Ru(III) complex has been studied using optical flash photolysis and EPR experiments. A step-wise electron transfer Mn(III,III)-->tyrosine Ru(III) has been demonstrated, in analogy to the reaction on the donor side of PSII. Electron transfer from the tyrosine to Ru(III) was coupled to tyrosine deprotonation. This resulted in a large reorganisation energy and thus a slow reaction rate, unless the tyrosine was hydrogen bonded or already deprotonated. A comparison with analogous reactions in PSII is made. Finally, light-induced oxidation of a manganese dimer linked to a Ru(II)-photosensitiser has been observed. Preliminary results suggest the possibility of photo-oxidising manganese dimers in several steps, which is an important advancement towards water oxidation.  相似文献   

3.
Because of their successful use in dye-sensitized solar cells, Ru(II) polypyridyl complex dyes adsorbed on nanocrystalline TiO2 films have been regarded as model systems for the experimental study of the ultrafast dynamics of interfacial light-induced electron transfer. Most studies have reported charge injection kinetics from Ru(dcbpyH2)2(NCS)2 (N3) to take place with a fast (sub-100 fs) phase, followed by a slower (0.7-100 ps) multiexponential component. This complex, multiphasic behavior observed for the electron injection process has prevented the development of a satisfying kinetic model and has led to often contradicting conclusions. Here, we show that the observed kinetic heterogeneity can result from the aggregation of sensitizer molecules on the surface. Carefully controlled deposition of Ru(II) complex dye molecules onto nanocrystalline titania consistently yields a monophasic injection dynamics with a time constant shorter than 20 fs. The latter figure suggests the process is beyond the scope of vibration-mediated electron transfer kinetic models and might be controlled by the electron dephasing in the solid.  相似文献   

4.
Visible light irradiation of a reaction mixture of carbonyl-coordinated tetra(2,4,6-trimethyl)phenylporphyrinatoruthenium(II) (Ru(II)TMP(CO)) as a photosensitizer, hexachloroplatinate(IV) as an electron acceptor, and an alkene in alkaline aqueous acetonitrile induces selective epoxidation of the alkene with high quantum yield (Phi = 0.6, selectivity = 94.4% for cyclohexene and Phi = 0.4, selectivity = 99.7% for norbornene) under degassed conditions. The oxygen atom of the epoxide was confirmed to come from a water molecule by an experiment with H(2)(18)O. cis-Stilbene was converted into its epoxide, cis-stilbeneoxide, without forming trans-stilbeneoxide. trans-Stilbene, however, did not exhibit any reactivity. Under neutral conditions, an efficient buildup of the cation radical of Ru(II)TMP(CO) was observed at the early stage of the photoreaction, while an addition of hydroxide ion caused a rapid reaction with the cation radical to promote the reaction with reversion to the starting Ru(II)TMP(CO). A possible involvement of a higher oxidized state of Ru such as Ru(IV), Ru(V), Ru(VI) through a dismutation of the Ru(III) species was excluded by an experiment with Ru(VI)TMP(O)(2). Decarbonylation of the Ru complex was also proven to be invalid. A reaction mechanism involving an electron transfer from the excited triplet state of Ru(II)TMP(CO) to hexachloroplatinate(IV) and subsequent formation of OH(-)-coordinated Ru(III) species, leading to an oxo-ruthenium complex as the key intermediate of the photochemical epoxidation, was postulated.  相似文献   

5.
Four tripodal sensitizers, Ru(bpy)(2)(Ad-tripod-phen)(2+) (1), Ru(bpy)(2)(Ad-tripod-bpy)(2+) (2), Ru(bpy)(2)(C-tripod-phen)(2+) (3), and Ru(bpy)(2)(C-tripod-bpy)(2+) (4) (where bpy is 2,2'-bipyridine, phen is 1,10-phenanthroline, and Ad-tripod-bpy (phen) and C-tripod-bpy (phen) are tripod-shaped bpy (phen) ligands based on 1,3,5,7-tetraphenyladamantane and tetraphenylmethane, respectively), have been synthesized and characterized. The tripodal sensitizers consist of a rigid-rod arm linked to a Ru(II)-polypyridine complex at one end and three COOR groups on the other end that bind to metal oxide nanoparticle surfaces. The excited-state and redox properties of solvated and surface-bound 1-4 have been studied at room temperature. The absorption spectra, emission spectra, and electrochemical properties of 1-4 in acetonitrile solution are preserved when 1-4 are bound to nanocrystalline (anatase) TiO(2) or colloidal ZrO(2) mesoporous films. This behavior is indicative of weak electronic coupling between TiO(2) and the sensitizer. The kinetics for excited-state decay are exponential for 1-4 in solution and are nonexponential when 1-4 are bound to ZrO(2) or TiO(2). Efficient and rapid (k(cs) > 10(8) s(-)(1)) excited-state electron injection is observed for 1-4/TiO(2). The recombination of the injected electron with the oxidized Ru(III) center is well described by a second-order kinetic model with rate constants that are independent of the sensitizer. The sensitizers bound to TiO(2) were reversibly oxidized electrochemically with an apparent diffusion coefficient approximately 1 x 10(-11) cm(2) s(-)(1).  相似文献   

6.
Proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) was examined in a series of biomimetic, covalently linked Ru(II)(bpy)(3)-tyrosine complexes where the phenolic proton was H-bonded to an internal base (a benzimidazyl or pyridyl group). Photooxidation in laser flash/quench experiments generated the Ru(III) species, which triggered long-range electron transfer from the tyrosine group concerted with short-range proton transfer to the base. The results give an experimental demonstration of the strong dependence of the rate constant and kinetic isotope effect for this intramolecular PCET reaction on the effective proton transfer distance, as reflected by the experimentally determined proton donor-acceptor distance.  相似文献   

7.
An ambidentate dicarboxylic acid bipyridine ligand, (4,5-diazafluoren-9-ylidene) malonic acid (dfm), was synthesized for coordination to Ru(II) and mesoporous nanocrystalline (anatase) TiO(2) thin films. The dfm ligand provides a conjugated pathway from the pyridyl rings to the carbonyl carbons of the carboxylic acid groups. X-ray crystal structures of [Ru(bpy)(2)(dfm)]Cl(2) and the corresponding diethyl ester compound, [Ru(bpy)(2)(defm)](PF(6))(2), were obtained. The compounds displayed intense metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) absorption bands in the visible region (ε > 11,000 M(-1) cm(-1) for [Ru(bpy)(2)(dfm)](PF(6))(2) in acetonitrile). Significant room temperature photoluminescence, PL, was absent in CH(3)CN but was observed at 77 K in a 4:1 EtOH:MeOH (v:v) glass. Cyclic voltammetry measurements revealed quasi-reversible Ru(III/II) electrochemistry. Ligand reductions were quasi-reversible for the diethyl ester compound [Ru(bpy)(2)(defm)](2+), but were irreversible for [Ru(bpy)(2)(dfm)](2+). Both compounds were anchored to TiO(2) thin films by overnight reactions in CH(3)CN to yield saturation surface coverages of 3 × 10(-8) mol/cm(2). Attenuated total reflection infrared measurements revealed that the [Ru(bpy)(2)(dfm)](2+) compound was present in the deprotonated carboxylate form when anchored to the TiO(2) surface. The MLCT excited states of both compounds injected electrons into TiO(2) with quantum yields of 0.70 in 0.1 M LiClO(4) CH(3)CN. Micro- to milli-second charge recombination yielded ground state products. In regenerative solar cells with 0.5 M LiI/0.05 M I(2) in CH(3)CN, the Ru(bpy)(2)(dfm)/TiO(2) displayed incident photon-to-current efficiencies of 0.7 at the absorption maximum. Under the same conditions, the diethylester compound was found to rapidly desorb from the TiO(2) surface.  相似文献   

8.
First- and second-generation dendrimers (Ru3 and Ru6) have been synthesized, and their photophysical properties were investigated in solution and when adsorbed on the nanocrystalline TiO2 surface. The performance of Ru3 and Ru6 as charge transfer photosensitizers in nanocrytalline TiO2 based solar cells was also investigated. The best photovoltaic performance was obtained by the Ru3 based solar cell yielding a short circuit current of J sc = 5.52 mA.cm (-2) and an open circuit voltage of V oc = 626 mV, corresponding to an overall conversion efficiency of eta = 1.80% that is approximately double the conversion efficiency of the reference compound Ru1 (eta = 0.91%) and of the second generation dendrimer Ru6 (eta = 0.95%). The particular efficiency of the first generation dendrimer, Ru3, is attributed to the better light-harvesting properties of the doped nanocrystalline TiO2 film when compared to Ru1, whereas the poor performance of the second generation dendrimer, Ru6, is attributed to the uneven adsorption of all of the ruthenium moieties to the nanocrystalline TiO2 surface at the same time.  相似文献   

9.
Redox-active tyrosine residues play important roles in long-distance electron reactions in enzymes such as prostaglandin H synthase, ribonucleotide reductase, and photosystem II (PSII). Spectroscopic characterization of tyrosyl radicals in these systems provides a powerful experimental probe into the role of the enzyme in mediation of long-range electron transfer processes. Interpretation of such data, however, relies critically on first establishing a spectroscopic fingerprint of isotopically labeled tyrosinate and tyrosyl radicals in nonenzymatic environments. In this report, FT-IR results obtained from tyrosinate, tyrosyl radical (produced by ultraviolet photolysis of polycrystalline tyrosinate), and their isotopologues at 77 K are presented. Assignment of peaks and isotope shifts is aided by density-functional B3LYP/6-311++G(3df,2p)//B3LYP/6-31++G(d,p) calculations of tyrosine and tyrosyl radical in several different charge and protonation states. In addition, characterization of the potential energy surfaces of tyrosinate and tyrosyl radical as a function of the backbone and ring torsion angles provides detailed insight into the sensitivity of the vibrational frequencies to conformational changes. These results provide a detailed spectroscopic interpretation, which will elucidate the structures of redox-active tyrosine residues in complex protein environments. Specific application of these data is made to enzymatic systems.  相似文献   

10.
We have studied the interfacial electron-transfer dynamics on TiO(2) film sensitized with synthesized ruthenium(II)-polypyridyl complexes--[Ru(II)(bpy)(2)(L(1))] (1) and [Ru(II)(bpy)(L(1))(L(2))] (2), in which bpy=2,2'-bipyridyl, L(1)=4-[2-(4'-methyl-2,2'-bipyridinyl-4-yl)vinyl]benzene-1,2-diol, and L(2)=4-(N,N-dimethylaminophenyl)-2,2'-bipyridine-by using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. The presence of electron-donor L(2) and electron-acceptor L(1) ligands in complex 2 introduces lower energetic ligand-to-ligand charge-transfer (LLCT) excited states in addition to metal-to-ligand (ML) CT manifolds of complex 2. On photoexcitation, a pulse-width-limited (<100 fs) electron injection from populating LLCT and MLCT states are observed on account of strong catecholate binding on the TiO(2) surface. The hole is transferred directly or stepwise to the electron-donor ligand (L(2)) as a consequence of electron injection from LLCT and MLCT states, respectively. This results an increased spatial charge separation between the hole residing at the electron-donor (L(2)) ligand and the electron injected in TiO(2) nanoparticles (NPs). Thus, we observed a significant slow back-electron-transfer (BET) process in the 2/TiO(2) system relative to the 1/TiO(2) system. Our results suggest that Ru(II) -polypyridyl complexes comprising LLCT states can be a better photosensitizer for improved electron injection yield and slow BET processes in comparison with Ru(II)-polypyridyl complexes comprising MLCT states only.  相似文献   

11.
Kim Y  Lee H  Dutta PK  Das A 《Inorganic chemistry》2003,42(13):4215-4222
Employing the strategy of quaternization of the 2,2' N atoms of the conjugated bipyridine ligand 1,4-bis[2-(4'-methyl-2,2'-bipyrid-4-yl)ethenyl]benzene (L), a polypyridyl complex of ruthenium(II) was tethered on the surface of zeolite Y. Electrochemical and spectroscopic properties of the complex suggest that, upon visible photoexcitation of the MLCT band, the electron is localized on the conjugated ligand rather than the bipyridines. Electron transfer from the surface complex to bipyridinium ions (methyl viologen) within the zeolite was observed. Visible light photolysis of the ruthenium-zeolite solid ion-exchanged with diquat and suspended in a propyl viologen sulfonate solution led to permanent formation of the blue propyl viologen sulfonate radical ion in solution. The model that is proposed involves intrazeolitic charge transfer to ion-exchanged diquat followed by interfacial (zeolite to solution) electron transfer to propyl viologen sulfonate in solution. Because of the slow intramolecular back-electron-transfer reaction and the forward electron propagation via the ion-exchanged diquat, Ru(III) is formed. This Ru(III) complex formed on the zeolite is proposed to react rapidly with water in the presence of light, followed by reaction with the propyl viologen sulfonate, to form pyridones and regeneration of Ru(II), which then continues the photochemical process.  相似文献   

12.
The novel (mu-alkoxo)bis(mu-carboxylato)diruthenium complex K[Ru(2)(dhpta)(mu-O(2)C-p-ZnTPP)(2)] 3 was prepared by simple ligand substitution reaction. Strong antiferromagnetic interaction between two Ru(III) ions of 3 was observed with a coupling constant of -425 approximately -404 cm(-1). The cyclic voltammogram of 3 can be explained in terms of superposition of those of ZnTPP-p-CO(2)H and K[Ru(2)(dhpta)(mu-O(2)CPh)(2)] 2, indicating no significant electrochemical interaction. The large conproportionation constant estimated from the reduction potentials for Ru(III)Ru(III) and Ru(II)Ru(III) indicates great stability of the mixed-valence state. The mixed-valence species [Ru(II)Ru(III)(dhpta)(mu-O(2)C-p-ZnTPP)(2)](2-) 4 was prepared by controlled potential electrolysis. The electronic absorption spectrum of 4 was quite similar to that of [Ru(II)Ru(III)(dhpta)(mu-O(2)CCH(3))(2)](2-) which is a typical Class II complex. The fluorescence from the S(2) state of the ZnTPP unit of 3 was significantly (78%) quenched. The electron transfer from the ZnTPP unit to Ru(III) ions in 3 is a plausible mechanism, even though energy transfer could not be ruled out completely. The free energy change for electron transfer, Delta G(CS), was estimated to be ca.-1.1 eV, which is similar to typical values for the reorganization energy lambda in polar solvents. Hence, the electron transfer scheme is situated almost at the top of the Marcus parabola, enabling ultrafast electron transfer.  相似文献   

13.
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   

14.
Nanocrystalline (anatase), mesoporous TiO2 thin films were functionalized with [Ru(bpy)2(deebq)](PF6)2, [Ru(bq)2(deeb)](PF6)2, [Ru(deebq)2(bpy)](PF6)2, [Ru(bpy)(deebq)(NCS)2], or [Os(bpy)2(deebq)](PF6)2, where bpy is 2,2'-bipyridine, bq is 2,2'-biquinoline, and deeb and deebq are 4,4'-diethylester derivatives. These compounds bind to the nanocrystalline TiO2 films in their carboxylate forms with limiting surface coverages of 8 (+/- 2) x 10(-8) mol/cm2. Electrochemical measurements show that the first reduction of these compounds (-0.70 V vs SCE) occurs prior to TiO2 reduction. Steady state illumination in the presence of the sacrificial electron donor triethylamine leads to the appearance of the reduced sensitizer. The thermally equilibrated metal-to-ligand charge-transfer excited state and the reduced form of these compounds do not inject electrons into TiO2. Nanosecond transient absorption measurements demonstrate the formation of an extremely long-lived charge separated state based on equal concentrations of the reduced and oxidized compounds. The results are consistent with a mechanism of ultrafast excited-state injection into TiO2 followed by interfacial electron transfer to a ground-state compound. The quantum yield for this process was found to increase with excitation energy, a behavior attributed to stronger overlap between the excited sensitizer and the semiconductor acceptor states. For example, the quantum yields for [Os(bpy)2(dcbq)]/TiO2 were phi(417 nm) = 0.18 +/- 0.02, phi(532.5 nm) = 0.08 +/- 0.02, and phi(683 nm) = 0.05 +/- 0.01. Electron transfer to yield ground-state products occurs by lateral intermolecular charge transfer. The driving force for charge recombination was in excess of that stored in the photoluminescent excited state. Chronoabsorption measurements indicate that ligand-based intermolecular electron transfer was an order of magnitude faster than metal-centered intermolecular hole transfer. Charge recombination was quantified with the Kohlrausch-Williams-Watts model.  相似文献   

15.
The ruthenium oxyl radical complex, [Ru(II)(trpy)(Bu(2)SQ)O(.-)] (trpy = 2,2':6',2"-terpyridine, Bu(2)SQ = 3,5-di-tert-butyl-1,2-benzosemiquinone) was prepared for the first time by the double deprotonation of the aqua ligand of [Ru(III)(trpy)(Bu(2)SQ)(OH(2))](ClO(4))(2). [Ru(III)(trpy)(Bu(2)SQ)(OH(2))](ClO(4))(2) is reversibly converted to [Ru(III)(trpy)(Bu(2)SQ)(OH-)](+) upon dissociation of the aqua proton (pK(a) 5.5). Deprotonation of the hydroxo proton gave rise to intramolecular electron transfer from the resultant O(2-) to Ru-dioxolene. The resultant [Ru(II)(trpy)(Bu(2)SQ)O(.-)] showed antiferromagnetic behavior with a Ru(II)-semiquinone moiety and oxyl radical, the latter of which was characterized by a spin trapping technique. The most characteristic structural feature of [Ru(II)(trpy)(Bu(2)SQ)O(.-)] is a long Ru-O bond length (2.042(6) A) as the first terminal metal-O bond with a single bond length. To elucidate the substituent effect of a quinone ligand, [Ru(III)(trpy)(4ClSQ)(OH(2))](ClO(4))(2) (4ClSQ = 4-chloro-1,2-benzosemiquinone) was prepared and we compared the deprotonation behavior of the aqua ligand with that of [Ru(III)(trpy)(Bu(2)SQ)(OH(2))](ClO(4))(2). Deprotonation of the aqua ligand of [Ru(III)(trpy)(4ClSQ)(OH(2))](ClO(4))(2) induced intramolecular electron transfer from OH- to the [Ru(III)(4ClSQ)] moiety affording [Ru(II)(trpy)(4ClSQ)(OH.)]+, which then probably changed to [Ru(II)(trpy)(4ClSQ)O(.-)]. The antiferromagnetic interactions (J values) between Ru(II)-semiquinone and the oxyl radical for [Ru(II)(trpy)(Bu(2)SQ)O(.-)] and for [Ru(II)(trpy)(4ClSQ)O(.-)] were 2J = -0.67 cm(-1) and -1.97 cm(-1), respectively.  相似文献   

16.
A trinuclear [[Ru(II)(bpy)(2)(bpy-terpy)](2)Fe(II)](6+) complex (I) in which a Fe(II)-bis-terpyridine-like centre is covalently linked to two Ru(II)-tris-bipyridine-like moieties by a bridging bipyridine-terpyridine ligand has been synthesised and characterised. Its electrochemical, photophysical and photochemical properties have been investigated in CH(3)CN and compared with those of mononuclear model complexes. The cyclic voltammetry of (I) exhibits, in the positive region, two successive reversible oxidation processes, corresponding to the Fe(III)/Fe(II) and Ru(III)/Ru(II) redox couples. These systems are clearly separated (DeltaE(1/2) = 160 mV), demonstrating the lack of an electronic connection between the two subunits. The two oxidized forms of the complex, [[Ru(II)(bpy)(2)(bpy-terpy)](2)Fe(III)](7+) and [[Ru(III)(bpy)(2)(terpy-bpy)](2)Fe(III)](9+), obtained after two successive exhaustive electrolyses, are stable. (I) is poorly luminescent, indicating that the covalent linkage of the Ru(II)-tris-bipyridine to the Fe(II)-bis-terpyridine subunit leads to a strong quenching of the Ru(II)* excited state by energy transfer to the Fe(II) centre. Luminescence lifetime experiments show that the process occurs within 6 ns. The nature of the energy transfer process is discussed and an intramolecular energy exchange is proposed as a preferable deactivation pathway. Nevertheless this energy transfer can be efficiently quenched by an electron transfer process in the presence of a large excess of the 4-bromophenyl diazonium cation, playing the role of a sacrificial oxidant. Finally complete photoinduced oxidation of (I) has been performed by continuous photolysis experiments in the presence of a large excess of this sacrificial oxidant. The comparison with a mixture of the corresponding mononuclear model complexes has been made.  相似文献   

17.
Intervalence charge transfer properties were studied for a set of mixed valence complexes incorporating Ru(III) and Fe(II)-centres linked by various saturated and unsaturated bridging ligands (BL). Studies reveal that degree of ground state electronic interaction and coupling between Ru(III) and Fe(II)-centrescanbe attenuated by changing the nature of the bridging ligand. Further, inclusion of the bridging ligand with interrupted π-electron system in a β-CD cavity initiate an optical electron transfer from Fe(II) to Ru(III) which is otherwise not observed.  相似文献   

18.
The yields and dynamics for energy transfer from the metal-to-ligand charge-transfer excited states of Ru(deeb)(bpy)(2)(PF(6))(2), Ru(2+), and Os(deeb)(bpy)(2)(PF(6))(2), Os(2+), where deeb is 4,4'-(CH(3)CH(2)CO(2))(2)-2,2'-bipyridine, anchored to mesoporous nanocrystalline (anatase) TiO(2) thin films were quantified. Lateral energy transfer from Ru(2+)* to Os(2+) was observed, and the yields were measured as a function of the relative surface coverage and the external solvent environment (CH(3)CN, THF, CCl(4), and hexanes). Excited-state decay of Ru(2+)*/TiO(2) was well described by a parallel first- and second-order kinetic model, whereas Os(2+)*/TiO(2) decayed with first-order kinetics within experimental error. The first-order component was assigned to the radiative and nonradiative decay pathways (tau = 1 micros for Ru(2+)*/TiO(2) and tau = 50 ns for Os(2+)*/TiO(2)). The second-order component was attributed to intermolecular energy transfer followed by triplet-triplet annihilation. An analytical model was derived that allowed determination of the fraction of excited-states that follow the two pathways. The fraction of Ru(2+)*/TiO(2) that decayed through the second-order pathway increased with surface coverage and excitation intensity. Monte Carlo simulations were performed to estimate the Ru(2+)* --> Ru(2+) intermolecular energy transfer rate constant of (30 ns)(-1).  相似文献   

19.
Transient anisotropy measurements are reported as a new spectroscopic tool for mechanistic characterization of photoinduced charge-transfer and energy-transfer self-exchange reactions at molecule-semiconductor interfaces. An anisotropic molecular subpopulation was generated by photoselection of randomly oriented Ru(II)-polypyridyl compounds, anchored to mesoscopic nanocrystalline TiO(2) or ZrO(2) thin films, with linearly polarized light. Subsequent characterization of the photoinduced dichromism change by visible absorption and photoluminescence spectroscopies on the nano- to millisecond time scale enabled the direct comparison of competitive processes: excited-state decay vs self-exchange energy transfer, or interfacial charge recombination vs self-exchange hole transfer. Self-exchange energy transfer was found to be many orders-of-magnitude faster than hole transfer at the sensitized TiO(2) interfaces; for [Ru(dtb)(2)(dcb)](PF(6))(2), where dtb is 4,4'-(C(CH(3))(3))(2)-2,2'-bipyridine and dcb is 4,4'-(COOH)(2)-2,2'-bipyridine, anchored to TiO(2), the energy-transfer correlation time was θ(ent) = 3.3 μs while the average hole-transfer correlation time was <θ(h+)> = 110 ms, under identical experimental conditions. Monte Carlo simulations successfully modeled the anisotropy decays associated with lateral energy transfer. These mesoscopic, nanocrystalline TiO(2) thin films developed for regenerative solar cells thus function as active "antennae", harvesting sunlight and transferring energy across their surface. For the dicationic sensitizer, [Ru(dtb)(2)(dcb)](PF(6))(2), anisotropy changes indicative of self-exchange hole transfer were observed only when ions were present in the acetonitrile solution. In contrast, evidence for lateral hole transfer was observed in neat acetonitrile for a neutral sensitizer, cis-Ru(dnb)(dcb)(NCS)(2), where dnb is 4,4'-(CH(3)(CH(2))(8))(2)-2,2'-bipyridine, anchored to TiO(2). The results indicate that mechanistic models of interfacial charge recombination between electrons in TiO(2) and oxidized sensitizers must take into account diffusion of the injected electron and the oxidized sensitizer. The phenomena presented herein represent two means of concentrating potential energy derived from visible light that could be used to funnel energy to molecular catalysts for multiple-charge-transfer reactions, such as the generation of solar fuels.  相似文献   

20.
Ruthenium(III)-polypyridyl complexes, generated from the photochemical oxidation of Ru(II) complexes with molecular oxygen, undergo facile electron transfer reaction with dialkyl and aryl methyl sulfides. The rate controlling electron transfer process is confirmed from the absorption spectrum of the transient sulfide radical cation. The spectrophotometric kinetic study shows that the reaction is of total second order, first order in Ru(III) complex and in the organic sulfide. The reaction rate is susceptible to the change of ligand in [Ru(NN)3]3+ and the structure of organic sulfide.  相似文献   

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