Controlling Excited State Localization in Bichromophoric Photosensitizers via the Bridging Group

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Abstract

A series of photosensitizers comprised of both an inorganic and an organic chromophore are investigated in a joint synthetic, spectroscopic, and theoretical study. This bichromophoric design strategy provides a means by which to significantly increase the excited state lifetime by isolating the excited state away from the metal center following intersystem crossing. A variable bridging group is incorporated between the donor and acceptor units of the organic chromophore, and its influence on the excited state properties is explored. The Franck-Condon (FC) photophysics and subsequent excited state relaxation pathways are investigated with a suite of steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopic techniques in combination with scalar-relativistic quantum chemical calculations. It is demonstrated that the presence of an electronically conducting bridge that facilitates donor-acceptor communication is vital to generate long-lived (32 to 45 μs), charge-separated states with organic character. In contrast, when an insulating 1,2,3-triazole bridge is used, the excited state properties are dominated by the inorganic chromophore, with a notably shorter lifetime of 60 ns. This method of extending the lifetime of a molecular photosensitizer is, therefore, of interest for a range of molecular electronic devices and photophysical applications.

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Shillito, G. E., Preston, D., Crowley, J. D., Wagner, P., Harris, S. J., Gordon, K. C., & Kupfer, S. (2024). Controlling Excited State Localization in Bichromophoric Photosensitizers via the Bridging Group. Inorganic Chemistry, 63(11), 4947–4956. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c04110

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