Nonadiabatic Charge Transfer within Photoexcited Nickel Porphyrins.
Maria A NaumovaGheorghe PaveliucMykola BiednovKatharina KubicekAleksandr KalinkoJie MengMingli LiangAhibur RahamanMohamed AbdellahStefano ChecchiaFrederico Alves LimaPeter ZaldenWojciech GaweldaChristian BresslerHuifang GengWeihua LinYan LiuQian ZhaoQinying PanMarufa AkterQingyu KongMarius ReteganDavid J GosztolaMátyás PápaiDmitry KhakhulinLatévi Max Lawson DakuKaibo ZhengSophie E CantonPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2024)
Metalloporphyrins with open d-shell ions can drive biochemical energy cycles. However, their utilization in photoconversion is hampered by rapid deactivation. Mapping the relaxation pathways is essential for elaborating strategies that can favorably alter the charge dynamics through chemical design and photoexcitation conditions. Here, we combine transient optical absorption spectroscopy and transient X-ray emission spectroscopy with femtosecond resolution to probe directly the coupled electronic and spin dynamics within a photoexcited nickel porphyrin in solution. Measurements and calculations reveal that a state with charge-transfer character mediates the formation of the thermalized excited state, thereby advancing the description of the photocycle for this important representative molecule. More generally, establishing that intramolecular charge-transfer steps play a role in the photoinduced dynamics of metalloporphyrins with open d-shell sets a conceptual ground for their development as building blocks capable of boosting nonadiabatic photoconversion in functional architectures through "hot" charge transfer down to the attosecond time scale.
Keyphrases
- high resolution
- single molecule
- molecular dynamics
- solid state
- minimally invasive
- density functional theory
- living cells
- cerebral ischemia
- metal organic framework
- quantum dots
- reduced graphene oxide
- high speed
- mass spectrometry
- genome wide
- cross sectional
- room temperature
- molecular dynamics simulations
- brain injury
- blood brain barrier
- magnetic resonance imaging
- oxide nanoparticles
- magnetic resonance
- water soluble
- transition metal