Literature DB >> 18939820

Excited state dynamics of a PtII diimine complex bearing a naphthalene-diimide electron acceptor.

Igor V Sazanovich1, Mohammed A H Alamiry, Jonathan Best, Robert D Bennett, Oleg V Bouganov, E Stephen Davies, Vyacheslav P Grivin, Anthony J H M Meijer, Victor F Plyusnin, Kate L Ronayne, Alexander H Shelton, Sergei A Tikhomirov, Michael Towrie, Julia A Weinstein.   

Abstract

A combination of picosecond time-resolved infrared spectroscopy, picosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, and nanosecond flash photolysis was used to elucidate the nature and dynamics of a manifold of the lowest excited states in Pt(phen-NDI)Cl 2 ( 1), where NDI = strongly electron accepting 1,4,5,8-naphthalene-diimide group. 1 is the first example of a Pt (II)-diimine-diimide dyad. UV/vis/IR spectroelectrochemistry and EPR studies of electrochemically generated anions confirmed that the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) in this system is localized on the NDI acceptor group. The lowest allowed electronic transition in Pt(phen-NDI)Cl 2 is charge-transfer-to-diimine of a largely Pt-->phen metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) character. Excitation of 1 in the 355-395 nm range initiates a series of processes which involve excited states with the lifetimes of 0.9 ps ( (1)NDI*), 3 ps ( (3)MLCT), 19 ps (vibrational cooling of "hot" (3)NDI and of "hot" NDI ground state), and 520 mus ( (3)NDI). Excitation of 1 with 395 nm femtosecond laser pulses populates independently the (1)MLCT and the (1)NDI* excited states. A thermodynamically possible decay of the initially populated (1)MLCT to the charge-transfer-to-NDI excited state, [Pt (III)(phen-NDI (-*))Cl 2], is not observed. This finding could be explained by an ultrafast ISC of the (1)MLCT to the (3)MLCT state which lies about 0.4 eV lower in energy than [Pt (III)(phen-NDI (-*))Cl 2]. The predominant decay pathway of the (3)MLCT is a back electron transfer process with approximately 3 ps lifetime, which also causes partial population of the vibrationally hot ground state of the NDI fragment. The decay of the (1)NDI* state in 1 populates vibrationally hot ground state of the NDI, as well as vibrationally hot (3)NDI. The latter relaxes to form (3)NDI state, that is, [Pt(phen- (3)NDI)Cl 2]*, which possesses a remarkably long lifetime for a Pt (II) complex in fluid solution of 520 mus. The IR signature of this excited state includes the nu(CO) bands at 1607 and 1647 cm (-1), which are shifted considerably to lower energies if compared to their ground-state counterparts. The assignment of the vibrational bands is supported by the density-functional theory calculations in CH 2Cl 2. Pt(phen-NDI)Cl 2 acts as a modest photosensitizer of singlet oxygen.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 18939820     DOI: 10.1021/ic801022h

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Inorg Chem        ISSN: 0020-1669            Impact factor:   5.165


  3 in total

1.  Ultrafast chemical physics: In search of molecular movies.

Authors:  Julia A Weinstein; Neil T Hunt
Journal:  Nat Chem       Date:  2012-02-21       Impact factor: 24.427

2.  Electrochemistry, chemical reactivity, and time-resolved infrared spectroscopy of donor-acceptor systems [(Q(x))Pt(pap(y))] (Q = substituted o-quinone or o-iminoquinone; pap = phenylazopyridine).

Authors:  Naina Deibel; David Schweinfurth; Stephan Hohloch; Milan Delor; Igor V Sazanovich; Michael Towrie; Julia A Weinstein; Biprajit Sarkar
Journal:  Inorg Chem       Date:  2014-01-08       Impact factor: 5.165

3.  Stabilising the lowest energy charge-separated state in a {metal chromophore - fullerene} assembly: a tuneable panchromatic absorbing donor-acceptor triad.

Authors:  Maria A Lebedeva; Thomas W Chamberlain; Paul A Scattergood; Milan Delor; Igor V Sazanovich; E Stephen Davies; Mikhail Suyetin; Elena Besley; Martin Schröder; Julia A Weinstein; Andrei N Khlobystov
Journal:  Chem Sci       Date:  2016-05-19       Impact factor: 9.825

  3 in total

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