Nanostructured dye-sensitized solar cells (DSSCs) are promising photovoltaic devices because of their low cost and transparency. Ruthenium polypyridine complexes have long been considered as lead sensitizers for DSSCs, allowing them to reach up to 11% conversion efficiency. However, ruthenium suffers from serious drawbacks potentially limiting its widespread applicability, mainly related to its potential toxicity and scarcity. This has motivated continuous research efforts to develop valuable alternatives from cheap earth-abundant metals, and among them, iron is particularly attractive. Making iron complexes applicable in DSSCs is highly challenging due to an ultrafast deactivation of the metal-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) states into metal-centered (MC) states, leading to inefficient injection into TiO 2 . In this review, we present our latest developments in the field using Fe(II)-based photosensitizers bearing N-heterocyclic carbene (NHC) ligands, and their use in DSSCs. Special attention is paid to synthesis, photophysical, electrochemical, and computational characterization.
The synthesis and the steady-state absorption spectrum of a new pyridine-imidazolylidene Fe(II) complex (Fe-NHC) are presented. A detailed mechanism of the triplet metal-to-ligand charge-transfer states decay is provided on the basis of minimum energy path (MEP) calculations used to connect the lowest-lying singlet, triplet, and quintet state minima. The competition between the different decay pathways involved in the photoresponse is assessed by analyzing the shapes of the obtained potential energy surfaces. A qualitative difference between facial ( fac) and meridional ( mer) isomers' potential energy surface (PES) topologies is evidenced for the first time in iron-based complexes. Indeed, the mer complex shows a steeper triplet path toward the corresponding MC minimum, which lies at a lower energy as compared to the fac isomer, thus pointing to a faster triplet decay of the former. Furthermore, while a major role of the metal-centered quintet state population from the tripletMC region is excluded, we identify the enlargement of iron-nitrogen bonds as the main normal modes driving the excited-state decay.
The control of photophysical properties of iron complexes and especially of their excited states decay is a great challenge in the search for sustainable alternatives to noble metals in photochemical applications. Herein we report the synthesis and investigations of the photophysics of mer and fac iron complexes bearing bidentate pyridyl-NHC ligands, coordinating the Fe with three ligand-field enhancing carbene bonds. Ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy reveals two distinct excited state populations for both mer and fac forms, ascribed to the populations of the T1 and the T2 states, respectively, which decay to the ground state via parallel pathways. We find 3-4 ps and 15-20 ps excited state lifetimes, with respective amplitudes depending on the isomer. The longer lifetime exceeds the one reported for iron complexes with tridentate ligands analogues involving four iron-carbene bonds. By combining experimental and computational results, a mechanism based on the differential trapping of the triplet states in spin-crossover regions is proposed for the first time to explain the impact of the fac/mer isomerism on the overall excited-state lifetimes. Our results clearly highlight the impact of bidentate Pyridyl-NHC ligands on the photophysics of iron complexes, especially the paramount role of fac/mer isomerism in modulating the overall decay process, which can be potentially exploited in the design of new Fe(II)-based photoactive compound.
The possibility of achieving luminescent and photophysically active metal-organic compounds relies on the stabilization of charge transfer states and kinetically and thermodynamically blocking non-radiative dissipative channels. In this contribution we explore the behavior of bidentate iron complexes bearing N-heterocyclic carbene ligands with extended conjugation systems by a multidisciplinary approach combining chemical synthesis, ultrafast time-resolved spectroscopy, and molecular modeling. Lifetimes of the metal-to-ligand charge transfer and metal-centered states reaching up to ≈20 picoseconds are evidenced, while complex decay mechanisms are pointed out, together with a possible influence of the facial and meridional isomerism. The structural degrees of freedom driving the non-radiative processes are highlighted and their rigidification is suggested as an effective way to further increase the lifetimes.
An atomistic understanding of the photoinduced spin-state switching (PSS) within polynuclear systems of d 4 -d 7 transition metal ion complexes is required for their rational integration into light-driven reactions of chemical and biological interests. However, in contrast to mononuclear systems, the multidimensional dynamics of the PSS in solvated molecular arrayshave not yet been elucidated, due to the expected complications associated to the connectivity between the metal centers and the strong interactions with the surroundings. In this work, the PSS in a solvated triiron(II) metallogrid complex is characterized using transient optical absorption and X-ray emission spectroscopies on the femtosecond timescale. The complementary measurements reveal the photoinduced creation of energy-rich (hot) and longlived quintet states, whose dynamics differ critically from their mononuclear congeners. This finding opens major prospects for developing novel schemes in solution-phase spin chemistry that are driven by the dynamic PSS process in compact oligometallic arrays.
TOC GRAPHICSKEYWORDS molecular squares, photophysics, time-resolved X-ray techniques, light-induced processes, ultrafast phenomena, spin-state switching.
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