Litcius/Paper detail

Panchromatic Light Harvesting and Stabilizing Charge‐Separated States in Corrole–Phthalocyanine Conjugates through Coordinating a Subphthalocyanine

Beatrice Berionni Berna, Benedikt Platzer, Maximiliam Wolf, Giulia Lavarda, Sara Nardis, Pierluca Galloni, Tomás Torres⊗, Dirk M. Guldi, Roberto Paolesse

2020Chemistry - A European Journal15 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Owing to the electron-donating and -accepting nature of corroles (Corr) and phthalocyanines (Pc), respectively, we designed and developed two novel covalently linked Corr-Pc conjugates. The synthetic route allows the preparation of the target conjugates in satisfying yields. Comprehensive steady-state absorption, fluorescence, and electrochemical assays enabled insights into energy and electron-transfer processes upon photoexcitation. Coordinating a pyridine-appended subphthalocyanine (SubPc) to the Pc of the conjugate sets up the ways and means to realize the first example of an array composed by three different porphyrinoids, which drives a cascade of energy and charge-transfer processes. Importantly, the SubPc assists in stabilizing the charge-separated state, that is, one-electron oxidized Corr and the one electron-reduced Pc, upon photoexcitation by means of a reductive charge transfer to the SubPc. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first case of an intramolecular oxidation of a Corr within electron-donor-acceptor conjugates by means of just photoexcitation. Moreover, the combination of Corr, Pc, and SubPc guarantees panchromatic absorption across the visible range of the solar spectrum, with the SubPc covering the "green gap" that usually affects porphyrinoids.

Topics & Concepts

PhotoexcitationPhotochemistryIntramolecular forceChemistryAbsorption (acoustics)Electron transferPhthalocyanineFluorescenceConjugateMaterials scienceAtomic physicsStereochemistryOrganic chemistryExcited statePhysicsMathematical analysisMathematicsComposite materialQuantum mechanicsPorphyrin and Phthalocyanine ChemistryPhotochemistry and Electron Transfer StudiesPhotochromic and Fluorescence Chemistry