Publications (17) View all
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Article: Direct Evidence of Significantly Different Chemical Behavior and Excited-State Dynamics of 1,7- and 1,6-Regioisomers of Pyrrolidinyl-Substituted Perylene Diimide.
Rajeev K Dubey, Marja Niemi, Kimmo Kaunisto, Alexander Efimov, Nikolai V Tkachenko, Helge Lemmetyinen[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: Novel bay-functionalized perylene diimides with additional substitution sites close to the perylene core have been prepared by the reaction between 1,7(6)-dibromoperylene diimide 6 (dibromo-PDI) and 2-(benzyloxymethyl)pyrrolidine 5. Distinct differences in the chemical behaviors of the 1,7- and 1,6-regioisomers have been discerned. While the 1,6-dibromo-PDI produced the corresponding 1,6-bis-substituted derivative more efficiently, the 1,7-dibromo-PDI underwent predominant mono-debromination, yielding a mono-substituted PDI along with a small amount of the corresponding 1,7-bis-substituted compound. By varying the reaction conditions, a controlled stepwise bis-substitution of the bromo substituents was also achieved, allowing the direct synthesis of asymmetrical 1,6- and 1,7-PDIs. The compounds were isolated as individual regioisomers. Fullerene (C60 ) was then covalently linked at the bay region of the newly prepared PDIs. In this way, two separate sets of perylene diimide-fullerene dyads, namely single-bridged (SB-1,7-PDI-C60 and SB-1,6-PDI-C60 ) and double-bridged (DB-1,7-PDI-C60 and DB-1,6-PDI-C60 ), were synthesized. The fullerene was intentionally attached at the bay region of the PDI to achieve close proximity of the two chromophores and to ensure an efficient photoinduced electron transfer. A detailed study of the photodynamics has revealed that photoinduced electron transfer from the perylene diimide chromophore to the fullerene occurs in all four dyads in polar benzonitrile, and also occurs in the single-bridged dyads in nonpolar toluene. The process was found to be substantially faster and more efficient in the dyads containing the 1,7-regioisomer, both for the singly- and double-bridged molecules. In the case of the single-bridged dyads, SB-1,7-PDI-C60 and SB-1,6-PDI-C60 , different relaxation pathways of their charge-separated states have been discovered. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first observation of photoinduced electron transfer in PDI-C60 dyads in a nonpolar medium.Chemistry 03/2013; · 5.93 Impact Factor -
Article: Quantitative analysis of intramolecular exciplex and electron transfer in a double-linked zinc porphyrin-fullerene dyad.
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ABSTRACT: Photoinduced charge transfer in a double-linked zinc porphyrin-fullerene dyad is studied. When the dyad is excited at the absorption band of the charge-transfer complex (780 nm), an intramolecular exciplex is formed, followed by the complete charge separated (CCS) state. By analyzing the results obtained from time-resolved transient absorption and emission decay measurements in a range of solvents with different polarities, we derived a dependence between the observable lifetimes and internal parameters controlling the reaction rate constants based on the semiquantum Marcus electron-transfer theory. The critical value of the solvent polarity was found to be ε(r) ≈ 6.5: in solvents with higher dielectric constants, the energy of the CCS state is lower than that of the exciplex and the relaxation takes place via the CCS state predominantly, whereas in solvents with lower polarities the energy of the CCS state is higher and the exciplex relaxes directly to the ground state. In solvents with moderate polarities the exciplex and the CCS state are in equilibrium and cannot be separated spectroscopically. The degree of the charge shift in the exciplex relative to that in the CCS state was estimated to be 0.55 ± 0.02. The electronic coupling matrix elements for the charge recombination process and for the direct relaxation of the exciplex to the ground state were found to be 0.012 ± 0.001 and 0.245 ± 0.022 eV, respectively.The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 09/2012; 116(39):9653-61. · 2.95 Impact Factor -
Article: Hydrogen-bonding effects on the formation and lifetimes of charge-separated states in molecular triads.
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ABSTRACT: 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.The Journal of Physical Chemistry A 07/2012; 116(31):8159-68. · 2.95 Impact Factor -
Article: Photoinduced electron transfer in linear triarylamine-photosensitizer-anthraquinone triads with ruthenium(II), osmium(II), and iridium(III).
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ABSTRACT: 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.Inorganic Chemistry 05/2012; 51(11):6333-44. · 4.60 Impact Factor -
Article: Azafullerene C59N-phthalocyanine dyad: synthesis, characterisation and photoinduced electron transfer.
Georgios Rotas, Jenni Ranta, Alexander Efimov, Marja Niemi, Helge Lemmetyinen, Nikolai Tkachenko, Nikos Tagmatarchis[show abstract] [hide abstract]
ABSTRACT: The synthesis of a new azafullerene C(59)N-phthalocyanine (Pc) dyad is described. The key step for the synthesis of the C(59)N-Pc dyad was the formation of the C(59)N-based carboxylic acid, which was smoothly condensed with hydroxy-modified Pc. The structure of the C(59)N-Pc dyad was verified by (1)H and (13)C NMR spectroscopy, IR spectroscopy, UV/Vis spectroscopy and MS measurements. The photophysical and electrochemical properties of the C(59)N-Pc dyad were investigated in both polar and non-polar solvents by steady state and time-resolved photoluminescence and absorption spectroscopy, as well as by cyclic voltammetry. Different relaxation pathways for the photoexcited C(59)N-Pc dyad, as a result of changing the solvent polarity, were found, thus giving rise to energy-transfer phenomena in non-polar toluene and charge-transfer processes in polar benzonitrile. Finally, the detailed quenching mechanisms were evaluated and compared with that of a C(60)-Pc dyad, which revealed that the different excited-state energies and reduction potentials of the two fullerene spheres (i.e. C(59)N vs. C(60)) strongly diverged in the deactivation pathways of the excited states of the corresponding phthalocyanine dyads.ChemPhysChem 02/2012; 13(5):1246-54. · 3.41 Impact Factor