The spin–orbit charge-transfer-induced intersystem crossing (SOCT-ISC) in Bodipy-phenoxazine (BDP-PXZ) compact electron-donor/-acceptor dyads was studied. PXZ is the electron donor, and BDP is the electron acceptor. The molecular geometry is varied by applying different steric hindrance on the rotation about the linker between the two subunits. Charge-transfer (CT) absorption bands were observed for the dyads with more coplanar geometry (electronic coupling matrix elements is up to 2580 cm–1). Ultrafast charge separation (0.4 ps) and slow charge recombination (3.8 ns, i.e., SOCT-ISC process) were observed. Efficient ISC (ΦT = 54%) and long triplet-state lifetime (τT = 539 μs) were observed for the dyads. Notably, the triplet-state lifetime is 2-fold of that accessed with heavy-atom effect, indicating the advantage of using a heavy-atom-free photosensitizer. The low-lying CT state in the dyads in polar solvents was confirmed with intermolecular triplet photosensitizing method. Time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy show that the electron spin polarization of the triplet state formed by the SOCT-ISC is the same as that of spin–orbit-ISC (SO-ISC). 3CT and localized excited triplet states (3LE) were simultaneously observed for one of the dyads, which is rare. Normally, the CT state was observed as spin-correlated radical pair. The dyads were used as triplet photosensitizers for triplet–triplet annihilation upconversion, the quantum yield is up to 12.3%. A large anti-Stokes shift (5905 cm–1) was achieved by excitation into the CT absorption band, not the conventional LE absorption band.
We prepared perylene (Pery)-phenothiazine (PTZ) compact donor/acceptor dyads with connection at either N-or 2-C positions of the PTZ moiety to attain molecular conformation restriction and to study the relationship between mutual chromophore orientation and spin−orbit charge-transfer intersystem crossing (SOCT-ISC) efficiency. In Pery-N-PTZ, the linkage is at the N-position of the PTZ moiety, and the molecule adopts an orthogonal geometry (φ = 91.5°), whereas in Pery-C-PTZ, the connection is at the 2-C position, resulting in a more planar geometry (φ = 60.6°). A diphenylamino derivative (Pery-DPA) was also prepared in which a N atom is fully π-conjugated with the perylene moiety. Highly solvent polarity-dependent singlet oxygen production was observed for the dyads (Φ Δ = 3−60%), which is an indication of the SOCT-ISC mechanism. The potential energy curve of the torsion about the C−N/C−C linker indicated different energy landscapes for the dyads; interestingly, we found that nonorthogonal geometry also induces efficient SOCT-ISC, which is different from previous studies. The ultrafast charge separation process (<100 fs) and the ISC rate (0.27 ps) were observed by femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy further confirmed the SOCT-ISC mechanism. With perylenebisimide as the triplet acceptor and the dyads as the triplet photosensitizer, the triplet−triplet annihilation-induced delayed fluorescence was observed, with the luminescence lifetime up to 71 μs.
2,6-diiodoBodipy-perylenebisimide (PBI) dyad and triad were prepared, with the iodoBodipy moiety as the singlet/triplet energy donor and the PBI moiety as the singlet/triplet energy acceptor. IodoBodipy undergoes intersystem crossing (ISC), but PBI is devoid of ISC, and a competition of intramolecular resonance energy transfer (RET) with ISC of the diiodoBodipy moiety is established. The photophysical properties of the compounds were studied with steady-state and femtosecond/nanosecond transient absorption and emission spectroscopy. RET and photoinduced electron transfer (PET) were confirmed. The production of the triplet state is high for the iodinated dyad and the triad (singlet oxygen quantum yield ΦΔ = 80%). The Gibbs free energy changes of the electron transfer (ΔGCS) and the energy level of the charge transfer state (CTS) were analyzed. With nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy, we confirmed that the triplet state is localized on the PBI moiety in the iodinated dyad and the triad. An exceptionally long lived triplet excited state was observed (τT = 150 μs) for PBI. With the uniodinated reference dyad and triad, we demonstrated that the triplet state localized on the PBI moiety in the iodinated dyad and triad is not produced by charge recombination. These information are useful for the design and study of the fundamental photochemistry of multichromophore organic triplet photosensitizers.
Compact electron donor/acceptor dyads were prepared, with perylenemonoimide (PMI) as the electron acceptor and phenothiazine (PTZ) as the electron donor, to study the relationship between the molecular geometry and the spin−orbit charge transfer (CT) intersystem crossing (SOCT-ISC) efficiency. The photophysical properties of the dyads were studied with steadystate and time-resolved optical and magnetic resonance spectroscopies. We found that PTZ is an ideal chromophore for molecular conformation restriction in the compact dyads, which exerts a significant effect on the electronic coupling between the donor and acceptor and thus on the photophysical properties such as UV−vis absorption, fluorescence, and ISC efficiency. Anomalous intensified fluorescence at elevated temperatures was observed, which can be fully rationalized by the bright twisted charge transfer (CT) state. The singlet oxygen quantum yields (Φ Δ ) of the dyads are up to 57%, which are highly solvent-polarity-dependent. Femtosecond transient absorption and fluorescence spectroscopies indicate that the charge separation proceeds within 1 ps and the charge-recombination-induced ISC takes 2.8 ns. With time-resolved electron paramagnetic resonance spectroscopy, we confirmed the SOCT-ISC mechanism of the dyad, for which the electron spin polarization and the population rates of the sublevels of the triplet state (zero-field states T X , T Y and T Z ) are drastically different from those of the spin−orbit-couplinginduced ISC (for monobrominated PMI). Photodriven intermolecular energy-transfer and electron-transfer processes in the presence of a triplet energy acceptor or a sacrificial electron donor were also studied. The radical anion of PMI was reversibly produced with photoreduction for which near-IR absorption band in the range of 750−850 nm was observed.
Pt(II) dbbpy bisacetylide (dbbpy = 4,4'-di(tert-butyl)-2,2'-bipyridine) complex (Pt-1) with two different Bodipy ligands was prepared with the goal to attain broad-band visible light absorbing, efficient funneling of the photoexcitation energy (via resonance energy transfer, RET) to the energy acceptor and high triplet formation quantum yields. Construction of the above-mentioned molecular structural motif is challenging because two different arylacetylide ligands are incorporated in the complex; normally two homoleptic acetylide ligands were used for this kind of N(∧)N Pt(II) complexes. A reference complex with trans bis(tributylphosphine) Pt(II) bisacetylide protocol (Pt-4) was prepared for comparison of the photophysical properties. The two different Bodipy ligands in Pt-1 and Pt-4 constitute singlet/triplet energy donor/acceptor, as a result the harvested photoexcitation energy can be funneled to the triplet state confined on one of the two Bodipy ligands. The photophysical properties of the complexes were studied with steady state UV-vis absorption and luminescence spectroscopies, femto- and nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopies, cyclic voltammetry, as well as DFT/TDDFT calculations. Fluorescence/phosphorescence dual emission were observed for the complex. The ultrafast intramolecular singlet/triplet energy transfer in Pt-1 was confirmed by the transient absorption spectroscopy (kFRET = 2.6 × 10(11) s(-1), ΦFRET = 87.1%) followed by an intersystem crossing (kISC = 1.9 × 10(10) s(-1)), and the triplet state lifetime (τT) is 54.1 μs. The reference complex Pt-4 shows drastically different kinetics with kFRET = 6.9 × 10(10) s(-1), ΦFRET = 81.0%, kISC = 5.83 × 10(9) s(-1), and τT = 147.9 μs. Different singlet oxygen ((1)O2) quantum yields (ΦΔ = 75% and 70%) and triplet state quantum yields (ΦT = 91% and 69%, respectively) were observed for complexes Pt-1 and Pt-4.
We prepared very thin amorphous InSe films and investigated the thickness dependence of the nonlinear absorption by pump-probe and open aperture Z-scan techniques. While thinner films (20 and 52 nm) exhibit saturable absorption, thicker films (70 and 104 nm) exhibit nonlinear absorption for 4 ns, 65 ps, and 44 fs pulse durations. This behavior is attributed to increasing localized defect states in the energy band gap as the film thickness increases. We developed a theoretical model incorporating one photon, two photon, and free carrier absorptions and their saturations to derive the transmission in the open aperture Z-scan experiment. The theory of open aperture Gaussian beam Z-scan based on the Adomian decomposition method was used to fit the experimental curves. Nonlinear absorption coefficients along with saturation intensity thresholds were extracted from fitting the experimental results for all pulse durations. The lowest saturation threshold was found about 3×10−3 GW/cm2 for 20 nm film thickness with nanosecond pulse duration and increased about four orders of magnitude for 104 nm film thickness.
Broadband near-IR absorbing trans-bis(trialkylphosphine) Pt(II) bisacetylide binuclear complex (Pt-1) was prepared with boron-dipyrromethene (Bodipy) and styrylBodipy acetylide ligands. Pt-1 shows strong absorption bands at 731 and 503 nm. Singlet energy transfer (EnT) and efficient intersystem crossing of the central coordinated Bodipy ligand were proposed to be responsible for the efficient funneling of the excitation energy to the triplet-state manifold. Reference complexes containing only a single Bodipy ligand were prepared for comparison (with styrylBodipy ligand Pt-0 or Bodipy ligand Pt-2). The molecular structures were confirmed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction. The photophysical properties were studied with steady-state and time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopies, electrochemical characterization, and density functional theory/time-dependent density functional theory calculations. Dual fluorescence was observed for Pt-1. Singlet EnT in Pt-1 was proposed based on the fluorescence quenching/excitation spectra, and femtosecond transient absorption spectra (energy transfer rate constant kEnT = 2.2 × 10(10) s(-1)). With nanosecond transient absorption spectra, intramolecular triplet-state energy transfer in Pt-1 was proved. Gibbs free energy changes of charge separation indicate that the photoinduced intramolecular electron transfer in Pt-1 is thermodynamically prohibited. Intermolecular triplet transfer between Pt-2 and L-1 was studied with nanosecond transient absorption spectra; the EnT rate and energy transfer efficiency were determined as 3.6 × 10(4) s(-1) and 94.5%, respectively. The singlet oxygen ((1)O2) photosensitizing of Pt-1 was improved as compared to the complexes containing only a single visible-light-absorbing chromophore.
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