Login / Signup

Anthracene-Naphthalenediimide Compact Electron Donor/Acceptor Dyads: Electronic Coupling, Electron Transfer, and Intersystem Crossing.

Kepeng ChenJianzhang ZhaoXiaoxin LiGagik G Gurzadyan
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. A (2019)
We attached different electron donors of phenyl, anthryl, and alkylamino moieties, to electron acceptor naphthalenediimide (NDI) to construct compact electron donor/acceptor dyads. The purpose is to study the effect of electron coupling (the magnitude is the matrix element, VDA) on the photophysical properties of UV-vis absorption, fluorescence emission, especially spin-orbit charge transfer intersystem crossing. We found that the magnitude of VDA depends on the electron donating strength of the aryl moieties ( VDA = 0.22-0.55 eV), as well as the molecular conformation, based on steady state and time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopies. We also found that electron coupling does not show the add-up (or synergetic) effect. Solvent polarity-dependent intersystem crossing (ISC) was observed for the dyad/triads and singlet oxygen quantum yield decreases in polar solvents. Femtosecond transient absorption results indicate that the charge separation (CS) for 9-An-NDI-NH occurs on time scale of 0.83 ps (in toluene) or 0.71 ps (in acetonitrile). The charge recombination (CR) process (50 ps in toluene) produces triplet state with ΦISC = 19%. The triplet state lifetime is up to 22 μs. This result indicates that orthogonal geometry for a compact electron donor/acceptor does not lead to efficient ISC via CR. Other factors such as the energy gap between the CS state and triplet state also determine the ISC efficiency.
Keyphrases
  • solar cells
  • electron transfer
  • energy transfer
  • room temperature
  • single molecule
  • brain injury
  • quantum dots
  • oxidative stress
  • dna damage
  • kidney transplantation
  • blood brain barrier
  • metal organic framework
  • dna repair