Abstract

A highly efficient functional mimic of the photosynthetic antenna-reaction-center complexes has been designed and synthesized. The model contains a zinc(II) porphyrin (ZnP) core, which is connected to three boron dipyrromethene (BDP) units by click chemistry, and to a C(60) moiety using the Prato procedure. The compound has been characterized using various spectroscopic methods. The intramolecular photoinduced processes of this pentad have also been studied in detail with steady-state and time-resolved absorption and emission spectroscopic methods, both in polar benzonitrile and nonpolar toluene. The BDP units serve as the antennae, which upon excitation undergo singlet-singlet energy transfer to the porphyrin core. This is then followed by an efficient electron transfer to the C(60) moiety, resulting in the formation of the singlet charge-separated state (BDP)(3)-ZnP(·+) -C(60)(·-) , which has a lifetime of 476 and 1000 ps in benzonitrile and toluene, respectively. Interestingly, a slow charge-recombination process (k(CR)(t)=2.6×10(6) s(-1)) and a long-lived triplet charge-separated state (τ(CS)(T)=385 ns) were detected in polar benzonitrile by nanosecond transient measurements.

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