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Excited Charge Transfer Promoted Electron Transfer in all Perylenediimide Derived, Wide-Band Capturing Conjugates: A Mimicry of the Early Events of Natural Photosynthesis


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Title:
Excited Charge Transfer Promoted Electron Transfer in all Perylenediimide Derived, Wide-Band Capturing Conjugates: A Mimicry of the Early Events of Natural Photosynthesis
Authors:
Gutiérrez Vílchez, Ana María  
Ileperuma, Chamari V.
Navarro-Pérez, Valeria
Karr, Paul  
Fernández-Lázaro, Fernando  
D'Souza, Francis  
Editor:
Wiley
Department:
Departamentos de la UMH::Farmacología, Pediatría y Química Orgánica
Issue Date:
2024-11
URI:
https://hdl.handle.net/11000/37861
Abstract:
Fundamental discoveries in electron transfer advance scientific and technological advancements. It is suggested that in plant and bacterial photosynthesis, the primary donor, a chlorophyll or bacteriochlorophyll dimer, forms an initial excited symmetry-breaking charge transfer state (1CT*) upon photoexcitation that subsequently promotes sequential electron transfer (ET) events. This is unlike monomeric photosensitizer-bearing donor-acceptor dyads where ET occurs from the excited donor or acceptor (1D* or 1A*). In the present study, we successfully demonstrated the former photochemical event using an excited charge transfer molecule as a donor. Electron-deficient perylenediimide (PDI) is functionalized with three electron-rich piperidine entities at the bay positions, resulting in a far-red emitting CT molecule (DCT). Further, this molecule is covalently linked to another PDI (APDI) carrying no substituents at the bay positions, resulting in wide-band capturing DCT-APDI conjugates. Selective excitation of the CT band of DCT in these conjugates leads to an initial 1DCT* that undergoes subsequent ET involving APDI, resulting in DCT +-APDI - charge separation product (kCS~109 s-1). Conversely, when APDI was directly excited, ultrafast energy transfer (ENT) from 1APDI* to DCT (kENT~1011 s-1) followed by ET from 1DCT* to PDI is witnessed. While increasing solvent polarity improved kCS rates, for a given solvent, the magnitude of the kCS values was almost the same, irrespective of the excitation wavelengths. The present findings demonstrate ET from an initial CT state to an acceptor is key to understanding the intricate ET events in complex natural and bacterial photosynthetic systems possessing multiple redox- and photoactive entities.
Keywords/Subjects:
charge separation
energy transfer
excited charge transfer emission
perylene diimide
redox potentials
Type of document:
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Access rights:
info:eu-repo/semantics/closedAccess
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional
DOI:
10.1002/cplu.202400348
Published in:
Chempluschem. 2024 Nov;89(11):e202400348.
Appears in Collections:
Artículos Farmacología, Pediatría y Química Orgánica



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