A. Osuka et al., SEQUENTIAL ELECTRON-TRANSFER LEADING TO LONG-LIVED CHARGE SEPARATED STATE IN A PORPHYRIN OXOCHLORIN PYROMELLITDIMIDE TRIAD, Bulletin of the Chemical Society of Japan, 68(1), 1995, pp. 262-276
The synthesis and excited-state dynamics are described for fixed-dista
nce porphyrin-oxo-chlorin-pyromellitdimide triads (P-C-Im) and related
reference compounds. In zinc-oxochlorin-pyromellit-dimide (ZnP-Im), t
he (1)(ZnC) is quenched by the attached Im through intramolecular cha
rge separation (CS) in benzene, THF, and DMF, while the (1)(H2C) in t
he corresponding free base is not significantly quenched by the Im eve
n in polar DMF. In the steady-state fluorescence emission spectra, onl
y the emission from the (1)(C) is commonly observed, indicating an ef
ficient intramolecular singlet-singlet excitation energy transfer from
P to C. Of these, the fluorescence intensities of the (1)(H2C) in Zn
P-H2C and ZnP-H2C-Im are significantly reduced in polar DMF solution a
nd this is attributed to the intramolecular CS that gives (ZnP)(+)-(H2
C)(-)-Im and (ZnP)(+)-(H2C)(-), respectively. The (ZnP)(+)-(H2C)(-)-Im
ion pair is clearly shown, by picosecond absorption spectroscopy, to
be converted into a secondary, longer-lived charge separated state (Zn
P)(+)-H2C-(Im)(-) via charge-shift reaction in competition with wastef
ul charge recombination to the ground state. The (ZnP)(+)-H2C-(Im)(-)
state is formed in 0.09 quantum yield from ZnP-(1)(H2C)-Im and has a
life time of 0.24 mu s in DMF.