Abstract

The cation radical of dye produced from the interfacial electron transfer from a surface chelated dye to the conduction band of the colloidal TiO2 was studied by laser flash photolysis and electron paramagnetic resonance (EPR) techniques. The study employed hypocrellin B (HB), a natural photodynamic pigment with strong absorption over the visible light region, as a sensitizer and titanium dioxide as a colloid semiconductor. HB formed a chelate with this colloid semiconductor and exhibited a red-shifted and strongly enhanced absorption in the visible spectrum. Laser photolysis indicated that the electron excitation in the visible absorption band of the chelate resulted in extremely rapid and efficient electron injection from the excited triplet state of the dye into the conduction band of the semiconductor. A transient absorption of cation radical of HB at 570 nm was observed. The appearance of cation radical of HB was characterized by EPR spectrometry: the photoinduced EPR signal was not quenched by oxygen and its intensity decreased in the presence of NaI, a typical hole scavenger. The generation of conduction band electrons in HB-sensitized TiO2 system was also verified by the spin elimination of a stable cyclic nitroxide, 2,2, 6,6-tetramethylpiperidine-1-oxyl (TEMPO), and by the reduction of methyl viologen (MV2+) to its radical MV+·.

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