Litcius/Paper detail

Controlling Spin‐Correlated Radical Pairs with Donor–Acceptor Dyads: A New Concept to Generate Reduced Metal Complexes for More Efficient Photocatalysis

Svenja Neumann, Oliver S. Wenger, Christoph Kerzig

2020Chemistry - A European Journal37 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

One-electron reduced metal complexes derived from photoactive ruthenium or iridium complexes are important intermediates for substrate activation steps in photoredox catalysis and for the photocatalytic generation of solar fuels. However, owing to the heavy atom effect, direct photochemical pathways to these key intermediates suffer from intrinsic efficiency problems resulting from rapid geminate recombination of radical pairs within the so-called solvent cage. In this study, we prepared and investigated molecular dyads capable of producing reduced metal complexes via an indirect pathway relying on a sequence of energy and electron transfer processes between a Ru complex and a covalently connected anthracene moiety. Our test reaction to establish the proof-of-concept is the photochemical reduction of ruthenium(tris)bipyridine by the ascorbate dianion as sacrificial donor in aqueous solution. The photochemical key step in the Ru-anthracene dyads is the reduction of a purely organic (anthracene) triplet excited state by the ascorbate dianion, yielding a spin-correlated radical pair whose (unproductive) recombination is strongly spin-forbidden. By carrying out detailed laser flash photolysis investigations, we provide clear evidence for the indirect reduced metal complex generation mechanism and show that this pathway can outperform the conventional direct metal complex photoreduction. The further optimization of our approach involving relatively simple molecular dyads might result in novel photocatalysts that convert substrates with unprecedented quantum yields.

Topics & Concepts

PhotochemistryChemistryRutheniumAnthracenePhotoredox catalysisPhotocatalysisMoietyElectron transferBipyridineFlash photolysisPhotoinduced electron transferElectron acceptorMetalCatalysisKineticsStereochemistryReaction rate constantOrganic chemistryPhysicsQuantum mechanicsCrystal structureCO2 Reduction Techniques and CatalystsRadical Photochemical ReactionsCatalytic C–H Functionalization Methods