Abstract

We report on an electron donor-electron acceptor-stable radical (D-A-R•) molecule in which an electron spin state first prepared on R• is followed by photogeneration of an entangled singlet 1[D•+-A•-] spin pair to produce D•+-A•--R•. Since the A•- and R• spins within D•+-A•--R• are uncorrelated, spin teleportation from R• to D•+ occurs with a maximal 25% efficiency only for the singlet pair 1(A•--R•) by spin-allowed electron transfer from A•- to R•. However, since 1[D•+-A•-] is sufficiently long-lived, coherent spin mixing involving the unreactive 3(A•--R•) population affects entanglement and teleportation within D•+-A•--R•. Pulse electron paramagnetic resonance experiments show a direct correlation between electron spin flip-flops and entanglement loss, providing information for designing molecular materials to serve as nanoscale quantum device interconnects.

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