Publication | Open Access
Photoinduced Charge Transfer with a Small Driving Force Facilitated by Exciplex-like Complex Formation in Metal–Organic Frameworks
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Citations
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References
2021
Year
Photoinduced charge transfer (PCT) is a key step in the light-harvesting (LH) process producing the redox equivalents for energy conversion. However, like traditional macromolecular donor-acceptor assemblies, most MOF-derived LH systems are designed with a large Δ<i>G</i><sup>0</sup> to drive PCT. To emulate the functionality of the reaction center of the natural LH complex that drives PCT within a pair of identical chromophores producing charge carriers with maximum potentials, we prepared two electronically diverse carboxy-terminated zinc porphyrins, BFBP(Zn)-COOH and TFP(Zn)-COOH, and installed them into the hexagonal pores of NU-1000 via solvent-assisted ligand incorporation (SALI), resulting in BFBP(Zn)@NU-1000 and TFP(Zn)@NU-1000 compositions. Varying the number of trifluoromethyl groups at the porphyrin core, we tuned the ground-state redox potentials of the porphyrins within ca. 0.1 V relative to that of NU-1000, defining a small Δ<i>G</i><sub>0</sub> for PCT. For BFBP(Zn)@NU-1000, the relative ground- and excited-state redox potentials of the components facilitate an energy transfer (EnT) from NU-1000* to BFBP(Zn), forming BFBP(Zn)<sub>S1</sub>* which entails a long-lived charge-separated complex formed through an exciplex-like [BFBP(Zn)<sub>S1</sub>*-TBAPy] intermediate. Various time-resolved spectroscopic data suggest that EnT from NU-1000* may not involve a fast Förster-like resonance energy transfer (FRET) but rather through a slow [NU-1000*-BFBP(Zn)] intermediate formation. In contrast, TFP(Zn)@NU-1000 displays an efficient EnT from NU-1000* to [TFP(Zn)-TBAPy], a complex that formed at the ground state through electronic interaction, and thereon showed the excited-state feature of [TFP(Zn)-TBAPy]*. The results will help to develop synthetic LHC systems that can produce long-lived photogenerated charge carriers with high potentials, i.e., high open-circuit voltage in photoelectrochemical setups.
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