Synthesis and photophysics of porphyrin-fullerene donor-acceptor dyads with conformationally flexible linkers |
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Authors: | David I. Schuster Shaun MacMahon Luis Echegoyen |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Chemistry, New York University, New York, NY 10003, USA b Institute for Physical and Theoretical Chemistry, University of Erlangen, 91058 Erlangen, Germany c Department of Chemistry, Clemson University, Clemson, SC 29634, USA d Max Planck Institute for Bioinorganic Chemistry (formerly Strahlenchemie), D 45413 Mülheim, Germany |
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Abstract: | The synthesis and photophysics of a series of porphyrin-fullerene (P-C60) dyads in which the two chromophores are linked by conformationally flexible polyether chains is reported. Molecular modeling indicates the two moieties adopt a stacked conformation in which the two chromophores are in close proximity. Photoexcitation of the free base dyads in polar solvents such as tetrahydrofuran and benzonitrile, causes electron transfer (ET) to generate charge-separated radical pair (CSRP) states, which were directly detected using transient absorption (TA) techniques. In nonpolar solvents such as toluene, where CSRP states were not directly detected, fullerene triplet state states were formed, according to TA studies as well as singlet oxygen sensitization measurements. The low value of the quantum efficiency for sensitized formation of singlet molecular oxygen [O2(1Δg)] in toluene and chloroform indicates that singlet energy transduction to give H2P-1C60*, followed by intersystem crossing to H2P-3C60* and energy transfer to 3O2, is not the operative mechanism. Rather, a mechanism is proposed involving ET to give CSRP states followed by exergonic charge recombination to eventually generate fullerene triplets. Such a mechanism has been demonstrated experimentally for structurally related P-C60 dyads. For the corresponding ZnP-C60 dyads with flexible linkers, only photoinduced ET to generate long-lived CSRP states is observed. Photoinduced charge separation in these dyad systems is extremely rapid, consistent with a through space rather than through-bond mechanism. Charge recombination is up to three orders of magnitude slower, indicating this process occurs in the inverted region of the Marcus curve that relates ET rates to the thermodynamic driving force. These observations once again demonstrate the advantages of incorporating fullerenes as electron acceptor components in photosynthetic model systems. |
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Keywords: | Fullerenes Porphyrins Dyads |
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