Modeling and Characterization of Exciplexes in Photoredox CO Reduction: Insights from Quantum Chemistry and Fluorescence Spectroscopy.

J Phys Chem A

Mork Family Department of Chemical Engineering and Materials Science, University of Southern California, Los Angeles, California 90089, United States.

Published: April 2022

AI Article Synopsis

  • Interactions between excited-state arenes and amines create exciplexes, which can influence chemical reactivity and degradation pathways.
  • Understanding the geometries of these exciplexes is essential for studying their photophysical properties, but calculations can be complex.
  • Using fluorescence spectroscopy and computational methods, this research establishes a protocol to analyze exciplexes, revealing important insights about charge transfer interactions and their dependence on solvent conditions.

Article Abstract

Interactions between excited-state arenes and amines can lead to the formation of structures with a distinct emission behavior. These excited-state complexes or exciplexes can reduce the ability of the arene to participate in other reactions, such as CO reduction, or increase the likelihood of degradation via Birch reduction. Exciplex geometries are necessary to understand photophysical behavior and probe degradation pathways but are challenging to calculate. We establish a detailed computational protocol for calculation, verification, and characterization of exciplexes. Using fluorescence spectroscopy, we first demonstrate the formation of exciplexes between excited-state oligo-(-phenylene) (OPP), shown to successfully carry out CO reduction, and triethylamine. Time-dependent density functional theory is employed to optimize the geometries of these exciplexes, which are validated by comparing both emission energies and their solvatochromism with the experiment. Excited-state energy decomposition analysis confirms the predominant role played by charge transfer interactions in the red shift of emissions relative to the isolated excited-state OPP*. We find that although the exciplex emission frequency depends strongly on solvent dielectric, the extent of charge separation in an exciplex does not. Our results also suggest that the formation of solvent-separated ionic radical states upon complete electron transfer competes with exciplex formation in higher-dielectric solvents, thereby leading to reduced exciplex emission intensities in fluorescence experiments.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpca.1c10658DOI Listing

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