Back to Search Start Over

Synthesis and excited-state photodynamics of a chlorin-bacteriochlorin dyad--through-space versus through-bond energy transfer in tetrapyrrole arrays.

Authors :
Muthiah C
Kee HL
Diers JR
Fan D
Ptaszek M
Bocian DF
Holten D
Lindsey JS
Source :
Photochemistry and photobiology [Photochem Photobiol] 2008 May-Jun; Vol. 84 (3), pp. 786-801. Date of Electronic Publication: 2008 Jan 15.
Publication Year :
2008

Abstract

Understanding energy transfer among hydroporphyrins is of fundamental interest and essential for a wide variety of photochemical applications. Toward this goal, a synthetic free base ethynylphenylchlorin has been coupled with a synthetic free base bromobacteriochlorin to give a phenylethyne-linked chlorin-bacteriochlorin dyad (FbC-pe-FbB). The chlorin and bacteriochlorin are each stable toward adventitious oxidation because of the presence of a geminal dimethyl group in each reduced pyrrole ring. A combination of static and transient optical spectroscopic studies indicate that excitation into the Qy band of the chlorin constituent (675 nm) of FbC-pe-FbB in toluene results in rapid energy transfer to the bacteriochlorin constituent with a rate of approximately (5 ps)(-1) and efficiency of >99%. The excited bacteriochlorin resulting from the energy-transfer process in FbC-pe-FbB has essentially the same fluorescence characteristics as an isolated monomeric reference compound, namely a narrow (12 nm fwhm) fluorescence emission band at 760 nm and a long-lived (5.4 ns) Qy excited state that exhibits a significant fluorescence quantum yield (Phif=0.19). Förster calculations are consistent with energy transfer in FbC-pe-FbB occurring predominantly by a through-space mechanism. The energy-transfer characteristics of FbC-pe-FbB are compared with those previously obtained for analogous phenylethyne-linked dyads consisting of two porphyrins or two oxochlorins. The comparisons among the sets of dyads are facilitated by density functional theory calculations that elucidate the molecular-orbital characteristics of the energy donor and acceptor constituents. The electron-density distributions in the frontier molecular orbitals provide insights into the through-bond electronic interactions that can also contribute to the energy-transfer process in the different types of dyads.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0031-8655
Volume :
84
Issue :
3
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Photochemistry and photobiology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
18208458
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1751-1097.2007.00258.x