Abstract

AbstractAs an excellent artificial photosynthetic reaction center, the carotene (C)‐porphyrin (P)‐fullerene (F) triad was extensively investigated experimentally. To reveal the mechanism of the intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) on the mimic of photosynthetic solar energy conversion (such as singlet energy transfer between pigments, and photoinduced electron transfer from excited singlet states to give long‐lived charge‐separated states), the ICT mechanisms of C‐P‐F triad on the exciton were theoretically studied with quantum chemical methods as well as the 2D and 3D real space analysis approaches. The results of quantum chemical methods reveal that the excited states are the ICT states, since the densities of HOMO are localized in the carotene or porphyrin unit, and the densities of LUMO are localized in the fullerene unit. Furthermore, the excited states should be the intramolecular superexchange charge transfer (ISCT) states for the orbital transition from the HOMO whose densities are localized in the carotene to the LUMO whose densities are localized in the fullerene unit. The 3D charge difference densities can clearly show that some excited states are ISCT excited states, since the electron and hole are resident in the fullerene and carotene units, respectively. From the results of the electron‐hole coherence of the 2D transition density matrix, not only 3D results are supported, but also the delocalization size on the exciton can be observed. These phenomena were further interpreted with non‐linear optical effect. The large changes of the linear and non‐linear polarizabilities on the exciton result in the charge separate states, and if their changes are large enough, the ICT mechanism can become the ISCT on the exciton.

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