Publications by authors named "Michael T Vagnini"

Photodriving the activity of water-oxidation catalysts is a critical step toward generating fuel from sunlight. The design of a system with optimal energetics and kinetics requires a mechanistic understanding of the single-electron transfer events in catalyst activation. To this end, we report here the synthesis and photophysical characterization of two covalently bound chromophore-catalyst electron transfer dyads, in which the dyes are derivatives of the strong photooxidant perylene-3,4:9,10-bis(dicarboximide) (PDI) and the molecular catalyst is the Cp*Ir(ppy)Cl metal complex, where ppy = 2-phenylpyridine.

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Elucidation of photoinduced charge transfer behavior in organic dye/metal hybrids is important for developing photocatalytic systems for solar energy conversion. We report the synthesis and photophysical characterization of a perylene-3,4:9,10-bis(dicarboximide) (PDI)-ruthenium(II) complex, bis-PDI-2,2'-bipyridineRu(II)Cl(2)(CN(t)butyl)(2), which has favorable energetics, ΔG(CS) ≈ -1.0 eV, for singlet electron transfer from the Ru complex to PDI.

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Metal coordination was probed as a versatile approach for designing a novel electron donor/acceptor hybrid [PDIpy(4){Ru(CO)Pc}(4)] (1), in which four pyridines placed at the bay region of a perylenediimides (PDIpy(4)) coordinate with four ruthenium phthalocyanine units [Ru(CO)Pc]. This structural motif was expected to promote strong electronic coupling between the electron donors and the electron acceptor, a hypothesis that was confirmed in a full-fledged physicochemical investigation focusing on the ground and excited state reactivities. As far as the ground state is concerned, absorption and electrochemical assays indeed reveal a notable redistribution of electron density, that is, from the electron-donating [Ru(CO)Pc] to the electron-accepting PDIpy(4).

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Ruthenium-catalyzed C-H bond activation was used to directly attach phenethyl groups derived from styrene to positions ortho to the imide groups in a variety of rylene imides and diimides including naphthalene-1,8-dicarboximide (NMI), naphthalene-1,4:5,8-bis(dicarboximide) (NI), perylene-3,4-dicarboximide (PMI), perylene-3,4:9,10-bis(dicarboximide) (PDI), and terrylene-3,4:11,12-bis(dicarboximide) (TDI). The monoimides were dialkylated, while the diimides were tetraalkylated, with the exception of NI, which could only be dialkylated due to steric hindrance. The absorption, fluorescence, transient absorption spectra, and lowest excited singlet state lifetimes of these chromophores, with the exception of NI, are nearly identical to those of their unsubstituted parent chromophores.

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Electronic energy transfer can fall into two limiting cases. When the rate of the energy transfer back reaction is much faster than relaxation of the acceptor excited state, equilibrium between the donor and acceptor excited states is achieved and only the equilibrium constant for the energy transfer can be measured. When the rate of the back reaction is much slower than relaxation of the acceptor, the energy transfer is irreversible and only the forward rate constant can be measured.

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Macrocyclic complexes of the type trans-[Cr(N4)(CN)2]+, where N4 = cyclam, 1,11-C3-cyclam, and 1,4-C2-cyclam demonstrate significant variation in their room-temperature excited-state behavior; namely, the lifetimes of the 2Eg (Oh) excited states are 335, 23, and 0.24 micros, respectively. The lifetimes of these complexes have been measured in acidified H2O/dimethyl sulfoxide over the temperature range between -30 and +95 degrees C.

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