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Optical Intramolecular Electron Transfer in Opposite Directions through the Same Bridge That Follows Different Pathways.

Eric J PiechotaLudovic Troian-GautierNewton M Barbosa NetoM Kyle BrennamanKe HuCurtis P BerlinguetteGerald J Meyer
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2018)
The electrochemical and spectroscopic properties of eight bis(tridentate) cyclometalated RuII compounds covalently linked by a phenyl- or xylyl-thiophene bridge to a pendant triphenylamine (TPA) were characterized in fluid solution and immobilized on metal oxide surfaces. Upon surface immobilization, the TPA+/0 reduction potentials of the phenyl-bridged compounds exhibited large changes, ±100 mV, relative to solution-based values, yet those observed for the xylyl-bridged compounds were relatively unchanged. The highest occupied molecular orbital of the surface-immobilized compounds was associated with either TPA or RuII, enabling the study of the electron transfer in opposite directions. Electron transfer in the mixed-valent states of the compounds was found to proceed by different optical pathways for RuII → TPA+ relative to TPA → RuIII. Mulliken-Hush analysis of intervalence charge transfer bands for the phenyl-bridged compounds revealed that the electronic coupling matrix element, HDA, was ∼950 cm-1 for RuII → TPA+, while HDA for TPA → RuIII appeared to be 2500 cm-1. In contrast, the xylyl-bridged compounds were weakly coupled. A superexchange analysis, where unoccupied bridge orbitals were taken directly into account, led to a very different conclusion: HDA did not depend on the charge-transfer direction or path. The results imply that the electron-transfer direction can alter optical charge transfer pathways without influencing the electronic coupling.
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