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Orbital Engineering: Photoactivation of an Organofunctionalized Polyoxotungstate.

Jamie M CameronSatomi FujimotoKatharina KastnerRong-Jia WeiDavid RobinsonVictor SansGraham N NewtonH Hiroki Oshio
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2016)
Tungsten-based polyoxometalates (POMs) have been employed as UV-driven photo-catalysts for a range of organic transformations. Their photoactivity is dependent on electronic transitions between frontier orbitals and thus manipulation of orbital energy levels provides a promising means of extending their utility into the visible regime. Herein, an organic-inorganic hybrid polyoxometalate, K6 [P2 W17 O57 (PO5 H5 C7 )2 ]⋅6 C4 H9 NO, was found to exhibit enhanced redox behaviour and photochemistry compared to its purely inorganic counterparts. Hybridization with electron-withdrawing moieties was shown to tune the frontier orbital energy levels and reduce the HOMO-LUMO gap, leading to direct visible-light photoactivation of the hybrid and establishing a simple, cheap and effective approach to the generation of visible-light-activated hybrid nanomaterials.
Keyphrases
  • visible light
  • water soluble
  • electron transfer
  • highly efficient
  • metal organic framework
  • single molecule
  • perovskite solar cells
  • molecular dynamics