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Intramolecular Light-Driven Accumulation of Reduction Equivalents by Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer

Kuss-Petermann, Martin and Orazietti, Margherita and Hamm, Peter and Wenger, Oliver S.. (2017) Intramolecular Light-Driven Accumulation of Reduction Equivalents by Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer. Journal of the American Chemical Society, 139 (14). pp. 5225-5232.

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Official URL: http://edoc.unibas.ch/58019/

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Abstract

The photochemistry of a molecular pentad composed of a central anthraquinone (AQ) acceptor flanked by two Ru(bpy)32+ photosensitizers and two peripheral triarylamine (TAA) donors was investigated by transient IR and UV–vis spectroscopies in the presence of 0.2 M p-toluenesulfonic acid (TsOH) in deaerated acetonitrile. In ∼15% of all excited pentad molecules, AQ is converted to its hydroquinone form (AQH2) via reversible intramolecular electron transfer from the two TAA units (τ = 65 ps), followed by intermolecular proton transfer from TsOH (τ ≈ 3 ns for the first step). Although the light-driven accumulation of reduction equivalents occurs through a sequence of electron and proton transfer steps, the resulting photoproduct decays via concerted PCET (τ = 4.7 μs) with an H/D kinetic isotope effect of 1.4 ± 0.2. Moreover, the reoxidation of AQH2 seems to take place via a double electron transfer step involving both TAA+ units rather than sequential single electron transfer events. Thus, the overall charge-recombination reaction seems to involve a concerted proton-coupled two-electron oxidation of AQH2. The comparison of experimental data obtained in neat acetonitrile with data from acidic solutions suggests that the inverted driving-force effect can play a crucial role for obtaining long-lived photoproducts resulting from multiphoton, multielectron processes. Our pentad provides the first example of light-driven accumulation of reduction equivalents stabilized by PCET in artificial molecular systems without sacrificial reagents. Our study provides fundamental insight into how light-driven multielectron redox chemistry, for example the reduction of CO2 or the oxidation of H2O, can potentially be performed without sacrificial reagents.
Faculties and Departments:05 Faculty of Science > Departement Chemie > Chemie > Anorganische Chemie (Wenger)
UniBasel Contributors:Wenger, Oliver and Kuss-Petermann, Martin
Item Type:Article, refereed
Article Subtype:Research Article
Publisher:American Chemical Society
ISSN:0002-7863
e-ISSN:1520-5126
Note:Publication type according to Uni Basel Research Database: Journal article
Identification Number:
Last Modified:27 Dec 2017 13:56
Deposited On:27 Dec 2017 13:56

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