Investigation of a bacteriochlorin-containing pentad array for panchromatic light-harvesting and charge separation.
Haoyu JingNikki Cecil M MagdaongJames R DiersChristine KirmaierDavid F BocianDewey HoltenJonathan S LindseyPublished in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
A new pentad array designed to exhibit panchromatic absorption and charge separation has been synthesized and characterized. The array is composed of a triad panchromatic absorber (a bis(perylene-monoimide)-porphyrin) to which are appended an electron acceptor (perylene-diimide) and an electron donor/hole acceptor (bacteriochlorin) in a crossbar arrangement. The motivation for incorporation of the bacteriochlorin versus a free-base or zinc chlorin utilized in prior constructs was to facilitate hole transfer to this terminal unit and thereby achieve a higher yield of charge separation across the array. The intense S 0 → S 1 (Q y ) band of the bacteriochlorin also enhances absorption in the near-infrared spectral region. Due to synthetic constraints, a phenylethyne linker was used to join the bacteriochlorin to the core porphyrin of the panchromatic triad rather than the diphenylethyne linker employed for the prior chlorin-containing pentads. Static and time-resolved photophysical studies reveal enhanced excited-state quenching for the pentad in benzonitrile and dimethyl sulfoxide compared to the prior chlorin-containing analogues. Success was only partial, however, as a long-lived charge separated state was not observed despite the improved energetics for the final ground-state hole/electron-shift reaction. The apparent reason is more facile competing charge-recombination due to the shorter bacteriochlorin - porphyrin linker that increases electronic coupling for this process. The studies highlight design criteria for balancing panchromatic absorption and long-lived charge separation in molecular architectures for solar-energy conversion.
Keyphrases
- solar cells
- photodynamic therapy
- high resolution
- energy transfer
- electron transfer
- high throughput
- liquid chromatography
- high density
- metal organic framework
- magnetic resonance imaging
- dna damage
- optical coherence tomography
- gene expression
- genome wide
- quantum dots
- single molecule
- magnetic resonance
- single cell
- dna methylation
- oxide nanoparticles
- ionic liquid
- computed tomography
- visible light