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1.
Inorg Chem ; 62(9): 3808-3816, 2023 Mar 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36802519

ABSTRACT

The photophysical properties of monodentate-imine ruthenium complexes do not usually fulfil the requirements for supramolecular solar energy conversion schemes. Their short excited-state lifetimes, like the 5.2 ps metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) lifetime of [Ru(py)4Cl(L)]+ with L = pz (pyrazine), preclude bimolecular or long-range photoinduced energy or electron transfer reactions. Here, we explore two strategies to extend the excited-state lifetime, based on the chemical modification of the distal N atom of pyrazine. On one hand, we used L = pzH+, where protonation stabilized MLCT states, rendering thermal population of MC states less favorable. On the other hand, we prepared a symmetric bimetallic arrangement in which L = {(µ-pz)Ru(py)4Cl} to enable hole delocalization via photoinduced mixed-valence interactions. A lifetime extension of 2 orders of magnitude is accomplished, with charge transfer excited states living 580 ps and 1.6 ns, respectively, reaching compatibility with bimolecular or long-range photoinduced reactivity. These results are similar to those obtained with Ru pentaammine analogues, suggesting that the strategy employed is of general applicability. In this context, the photoinduced mixed-valence properties of the charge transfer excited states are analyzed and compared with those of different analogues of the Creutz-Taube ion, demonstrating a geometrical modulation of the photoinduced mixed-valence properties.

2.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; 61(49): e202211747, 2022 Dec 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36161441

ABSTRACT

The excited-state version of the Creutz-Taube ion was prepared via visible light excitation of [(NH3 )5 RuII (µ-pz)RuII (NH3 )5 ]4+ . The resulting excited state is a mixed valence {RuIII-δ (µ-pz⋅- )RuII+δ } transient species, which was characterized using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy with vis-NIR detection. Very intense photoinduced intervalence charge transfers were observed at 7500 cm-1 , revealing an excited-state electronic coupling element HDA =3750 cm-1 . DFT calculations confirm a strongly delocalized excited state. A notable consequence of strong electron delocalization is the nanosecond excited state lifetime, which was exploited in a proof-of-concept intermolecular electron transfer. The excited-state Creutz-Taube ion is established as a reference, and demonstrates that electron delocalization in the excited state can be leveraged for artificial photosynthesis or other photocatalytic schemes based on electron transfer chemistry.

3.
Chemphyschem ; 23(20): e202200384, 2022 10 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35785464

ABSTRACT

The exploitation of excited state chemistry for solar energy conversion or photocatalysis has been continuously increasing, and the needs of a transition to a sustainable human development indicate this trend will continue. In this scenario, the study of mixed valence systems in the excited state offers a unique opportunity to explore excited state electron transfer reactivity, and, in a broader sense, excited state chemistry. This Concept article analyzes recent contributions in the field of photoinduced mixed valence systems, i. e. those where the mixed valence core is absent in the ground state but created upon light absorption. The focus is on the utilization of photoinduced intervalence charge transfer bands, detected via transient absorption spectroscopy, as key tools to study fundamental phenomena like donor/acceptor inversion, hole delocalization, coexistence of excited states and excited state nature, together with applications in molecular electronics.


Subject(s)
Electron Transport , Humans , Spectrum Analysis
4.
J Phys Chem Lett ; 11(19): 8399-8405, 2020 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32924492

ABSTRACT

Despite a diverse manifold of excited states available, it is generally accepted that the photoinduced reactivity of charge-transfer chromophores involves only the lowest-energy excited state. Shining a visible-light laser pulse on an aqueous solution of the chromophore-quencher [Ru(tpy)(bpy)(µNC)OsIII(CN)5]- assembly (tpy = 2,2';6,2''-terpyridine and bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine), we prepared a mixture of two charge-transfer excited states with different wave-function symmetry. We were able to follow, in real time, how these states undergo separate electron-transfer reaction pathways. As a consequence, their lifetimes differ in 3 orders of magnitude. Implicit are energy barriers high enough to prevent internal conversion within early excited-state populations, shaping isolated electron-transfer channels in the excited-state potential energy surface. This is relevant not only for supramolecular donor/acceptor chemistry with restricted donor/acceptor relative orientations. These energy barriers provide a means to avoid chemical potential dissipation upon light absorption in any molecular energy conversion scheme, and our observations invite to explore wave-function symmetry-based strategies to engineer these barriers.

5.
Chem Commun (Camb) ; 55(53): 7659-7662, 2019 Jun 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31198917

ABSTRACT

Upon MLCT photoexcitation, {(tpy)Ru} becomes the electron acceptor in the mixed valence {(tpy˙-)RuIII-δ-NC-MII+δ} moiety, reversing its role as the electron donor in the ground-state mixed valence analogue. Photoinduced mixed valence interactions can be tuned to obtain extended lifetimes and higher emission quantum yields, beneficial in supramolecular energy conversion schemes.

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