| Literature DB >> 34040736 |
Elena Bassan1, Andrea Gualandi1, Pier Giorgio Cozzi1, Paola Ceroni1.
Abstract
BODIPYs are renowned fluorescent dyes with strong and tunable absorption in the visible region, high thermal and photo-stability and exceptional fluorescence quantum yields. Transition metal complexes are the most commonly used triplet photosensitisers, but, recently, the use of organic dyes has emerged as a viable and more sustainable alternative. By proper design, BODIPY dyes have been turned from highly fluorescent labels into efficient triplet photosensitizers with strong absorption in the visible region (from green to orange). In this perspective, we report three design strategies: (i) halogenation of the dye skeleton, (ii) donor-acceptor dyads and (iii) BODIPY dimers. We compare pros and cons of these approaches in terms of optical and electrochemical properties and synthetic viability. The potential applications of these systems span from energy conversion to medicine and key examples are presented. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry.Entities:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34040736 PMCID: PMC8132938 DOI: 10.1039/d1sc00732g
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Structure of the BODIPY core and IUPAC numeration.
Fig. 2Jablonski diagram for organic molecules with radiative (straight lines) and non-radiative processes (wavy lines).
Scheme 1
Fig. 3Population of triplet excited state T1 by radical-pair intersystem crossing (RP-ISC) or by spin–orbit charge transfer intersystem crossing (SOCT-ISC).
Scheme 2
Scheme 3
Scheme 4Photophysical and electrochemical properties of BODIPY dyes containing different halogens
| Molecule |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 71 000 | 517 | 529 | 73.4% | <0.05% | −1.05 | +1.14 |
|
| 48 000 | 544 | 562 | 67.5% | 22% | −0.85 | +1.46 |
|
| 56 300 | 545 | 565 | 15.5% | 54% | −0.74 | +1.33 |
|
| 49 000 | 553 | 575 | 1.8% | 84% | −0.75 | +1.30 |
In MeOH.
In MeCN.
Chemically irreversible electron transfer process.
In V vs. SCE.
Photophysical properties of BODIPY dyes with increasing number of iodine atoms
| Molecule |
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 69 000 | 500 | 516 | 3.6% | n.r. |
|
| 22 000 | 523 | 540 | 3.4% | n.r. |
|
| 43 000 | 548 | 567 | 1.2% | 83% |
|
| 48 000 | 563 | 577 | 6.0% | 86% |
|
| 116 000 | 581 | 593 | 9.9% | 87% |
|
| 44 000 | 498 | 509 | 65% | 1% |
|
| 81 000 | 499 | 511 | 49% | 1% |
In cyclohexane.
In MeCN.
In MeOH.
In DCM.
Scheme 5Photophysical and electrochemical properties of BODIPY dyes with different meso substituents
| Molecule |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 71 323 | 530 | 546 | 7% | −0.91 | +1.49 |
|
| 62 300 | 541 | 557 | 2% | −0.88 | +1.56 |
|
| 89 200 | 529 | 547 | 4% | −0.96 | +1.24 |
In V vs. SCE.
In DCM.
In MeCN.
Scheme 6
Scheme 7Photophysical and electrochemical properties of BODIPY dyads containing different electron-donating groups
| Molecule |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| n.r. | 503 | 514 | 0.5% | 36% | −1.21 | +1.11; +1.29 |
|
| 86 000 | 506 | 518 | 1% | 95% | −1.20 | +1.24 |
| 81% | 10% | ||||||
|
| 49 000 | 502 | 510 | 2.7% | 67% | −1.23 | +0.82; +1.30 |
|
| 48 700 | 502 | 510 | 7.2% | 25% | −1.23 | +0.78; +1.24 |
In DCM.
V vs. SCE.
In THF.
In MeCN.
In toluene.
Photophysical properties of pyrene-BODIPY dyads with increasing degree of alkylation, in EtOH
| Molecule |
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 503 | 660 | 0.3% | 75% |
|
| 512 | 511, 652 | 1.7% | 25% |
|
| 502 | 511 | 65.1% | 34% |
|
| 534 | 542 | 69.5% | 4% |
Scheme 8
Fig. 4Jablonski diagram illustrating the energies of the excited states involved in the SOCT-ISC mechanism (A) and related Marcus curve (B).
Scheme 9Photophysical and electrochemical properties of BODIPY dimers
| Molecule |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| 82 000 | 534 | 540 | 100% | ≤ 0.1 | — | — |
|
| 64 400 | 492 | 648 | 71% | 40% | — | — |
| 73 600 | 565 | ≪10% | |||||
|
| n.r. | 515 | 588 | 3% | 46% | — | — |
|
| n.r. | 514 | 527 | 31% | 51% | — | — |
|
| n.r. | 515 | 538 | 9.7% | n.r. | −0.91 | +1.40 |
|
| n.r. | 526 | 585 | 35% | n.r. | −0.73 | +1.42 |
| −0.92 | +1.60 |
In toluene.
In CHCl3.
In DCM.
In MeCN.
Chemically irreversible electron transfer process.
In V vs. SCE.
Scheme 10
Scheme 11
Fig. 5Simplified Jablonski diagram illustrating the main excited states' energy levels and processes involved in TTA upconversion. In this example, A = BDP-PTZ and B = perylene.
Scheme 12
Scheme 13
Scheme 14
Scheme 15
Scheme 16
Scheme 17
Scheme 18
Scheme 19
Fig. 6Historical development of BODIPY dyes.