Novel covalent fullerene C(60)-perylene-3,4:9,10-bis(dicarboximide) (C(60)-PDI) dyads (1-4) were synthesized and characterized. Their electrochemical and photophysical properties were investigated. Electrochemical studies show that the reduction potential of PDI can be tuned relative to C(60) by molecular engineering through altering the substituents on the PDI bay region. It was demonstrated using steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy that a quantitative, photoinduced energy transfer takes place from the PDI moiety, acting as a light-harvesting antenna, to the C(60) unit, playing the role of energy acceptor. The bay-substitution (tetrachloro [1 and 2] or tetra-tert-butylphenoxy [3 and 4]) of the PDI antenna and the linkage length (C(2) [1 and 3] or C(5) [2 and 4]) to the C(60) acceptor are important parameters in the kinetics of energy transfer. Femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy indicates singlet-singlet energy-transfer times (from the PDI to the C(60) unit) of 0.4 and 5 ps (1), 4.5 and 27 ps (2), 0.8 and 12 ps (3), and 7 and 50 ps (4), these values being ascribed to two different conformers for each C(60)-PDI system. Subsequent triplet-triplet energy-transfer times (from the C(60) unit to the PDI) are slower and in the order of 0.8 ns (1), 6.2 ns (2), 2.7 ns (3), and 9 ns (4). Nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy of final PDI triplet states show a marked influence of the bay substitution (tetrachloro- or tetra-tert-butylphenoxy), and triplet-state lifetimes (10-20 micros) and the PDI triplet quantum yields (0.75-0.52) were estimated. The spectroscopy showed no substantial solvent effect upon comparing toluene (non-polar) to benzonitrile (polar), indicating that no electron transfer is occurring in these systems.
A calix [4]arene scaffold has been functionalized with an electron-accepting perylene bisimide as well as an electron-donating pyrene unit. Steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy indicate a strong charge-transfer (CT) interaction between these two units in all investigated solvents. The signatures of the radical anion of the perylene bisimide and the radical cation of the pyrene are observed with femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. A preferential π-stacked conformation is inferred. In tetrahydrofuran as a solvent ∼25% of an extended form is invoked. The CT states of these two ground-state populations (π-stacked and extended) have different formation and decay kinetics and result in the spectral distinction of a compact and an extended charge-transfer state upon visible excitation. In the extended conformation, upon UV excitation, pyrene acts as an electron acceptor that is reduced through a photoinduced electron-transfer process by the calix[4]arene. In this conformation the calixarene scaffold is accordingly not an uninvolved linker unit but participates effectively in the electron-transfer processes.
The structure and reactivity of a covalently linked catechol-ortho-benzoquinone (hemiquinone) is studied by UV-Vis and IR absorption spectroscopy. Nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy of the hemiquinone reveals the formation of bi-radical state consisting of two semiquinone units. It is a long-lived state resulting from proton coupled electron transfer (PCET).
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