Synthesis and excited-state photodynamics in perylene-porphyrin dyads 2. Effects of porphyrin metalation state on the energy-transfer, charge-transfer, and deactivation channels
Si. Yang et al., Synthesis and excited-state photodynamics in perylene-porphyrin dyads 2. Effects of porphyrin metalation state on the energy-transfer, charge-transfer, and deactivation channels, J PHYS CH B, 105(34), 2001, pp. 8249-8258
The photophysical properties of two perylene-porphyrin dyads have been exam
ined in detail with the aim of expanding the functional utility of these co
nstructs for molecular optoelectronics applications. The dyads consist of a
perylene-bis(imide) dye (PDT) connected to either a magnesium porphyrin (M
g) or a free base porphyrin (Fb) via a diphenylethyne (pep) linker. The pho
tophysical behavior of these two dyads show both similarities and differenc
es to one another and to the dyad containing a zinc porphyrin (Zn) that was
examined in the previous paper in this series. In the case of both PDI-pep
-Fb and PDI-pep-Mg in toluene. the excited perylene unit (PDI*) decays rapi
dly (Fb = 2.9 ps; Mg = 2.5 ps) by energy transfer to the porphyrin forming
PDI-pep-Por* in relatively high yield (Fb similar to 85%; Mg similar to 50%
) and hole transfer to the porphyrin forming PDI--pep-Por(+) (Fb similar to
15%; Mg similar to 50%). This behavior parallels that observed for PDI-pep
-Zn. for which rapid (2.5 ps) decay of PDI* affords PDI-pep-Zn* and PDI--pe
p-Por+ with yields of 80% and 20%, respectively. The subsequent behavior of
the Fb-containing dyad is distinctly different in two ways from that of th
e Zn or Mg porphyrin-containing dyads. (1) Charge recombination within PDI-
-pep-Fb(+) primarily forms PDI-pep-Fb*, thereby complementing the formation
of the latter species from PDI*pep-Fb. (2) PDI-pep-Fb* subsequently decays
to the ground state via fluorescence emission with a rate and yield that a
re nearly identical to those of an isolated Fb porphyrin. In contrast. for
both PDI-pep-Mg and PDI-pep-Zn, the predominant decay process for PDI-pep-P
or* is electron-transfer yielding PDI--pep-Por(+) (Zn similar to 80%; Mg >
99%). The rapid electron-transfer quenching of PDI-pep-Por* and the nonemis
sive character of PDI--pep-Por(+) leads to negligible fluorescence from the
two metalloporphyrin-containing dyads after photoexcitation. The PDI--pep-
Por(+) charge- separated product with Por = Mg or Zn is very long-lived (>
10 ns) in toluene but decays much more rapidly (<0.5 ns) in acetonitrile. T
he differences in the rates of the various charge-transfer and charge-recom
bination processes of all of the dyads are consistent with a rate versus fr
ee-energy-gap profile (based on the relative redox potentials of the porphy
rin constituents) that is in qualitative accord with electron-transfer theo
ry. Collectively, the studies reported in this and the previous paper indic
ate that PDI-pep-Fb has the greatest potential utility in photonics applica
tions wherein light harvesting by an accessory pigment, energy transport to
an output chromophore, and emission (or energy transfer to another chromop
hore) are desired. On the other hand, PDI-pep-Mg (like PDI-pep-Zn) would be
most useful as an all-optical gating element in which excited-state energy
in an appended chromophore chain can be quenched by the charge- separated
state of the perylene-porphyrin dyad, thereby shunting the light output or
flow of energy.