Publication | Closed Access
Electron Transfer by Excited Benzoquinone Anions: Slow Rates for Two-Electron Transitions
19
Citations
47
References
2013
Year
Excited State PropertyEngineeringSlow RatesPhysicsNatural SciencesExcited Benzoquinone AnionsProton-coupled Electron TransferApplied PhysicsFast EtExcitation Energy TransferPhysical ChemistryElectron TransferQuantum ChemistryChemistryElectronic Excited StateCharge TransportChemical KineticsRate Constants
Electron transfer (ET) rate constants from the lowest excited state of the radical anion of benzoquinone, BQ(-•)*, were measured in THF solution. Rate constants for bimolecular electron transfer reactions typically reach the diffusion-controlled limit when the free-energy change, ΔG°, reaches -0.3 eV. The rate constants for ET from BQ(-•)* are one-to-two decades smaller at this energy and do not reach the diffusion-controlled limit until -ΔG° is 1.5-2.0 eV. The rates are so slow probably because a second electron must also undergo a transition to make use of the energy of the excited state. Similarly, ET, from solvated electrons to neutral BQ to form the lowest excited state, is slow, while fast ET is observed at a higher excited state, which can be populated in a transition involving only one electron. A simple picture based on perturbation theory can roughly account for the control of electron transfer by the need for transition of a second electron. The picture also explains how extra driving force (-ΔG°) can restore fast rates of electron transfer.
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