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Long-Range Observation of Exciplex Formation and Decay Mediated by One-Dimensional Bridges

Posted on 2017-06-16 - 20:04
We report herein unprecedented long-range observation of both formation and decay of the exciplex state in donor (D)–bridge (B)–acceptor (A) linked systems. Zinc porphyrins (ZnP) as a donor were tethered to single-walled carbon nanotube (SWNT) as an acceptor through oligo­(p-phenylene)­s (ZnP–phn–SWNT) or oligo­(p-xylene)­s (ZnP–xyn–1–ph1–SWNT) with systematically varied lengths (n = 1–5) to address the issue. Exponential dependencies of rate constants for the exciplex formation (kFEX) and decay (kDEX) on the edge-to-edge separation distance between ZnP and SWNT through the bridges were unambiguously derived from time-resolved spectroscopies. Distance dependencies (i.e., attenuation factor, β) of kFEX and kDEX in ZnP–phn–SWNT were found to be considerably small (β = 0.10 for kFEX and 0.12 Å–1 for kDEX) compared to those for charge separation and recombination (0.2–0.8 Å–1) in D–B–A systems with the same oligo­(p-phenylene) bridges. The small β values may be associated with the exciplex state with mixed characters of charge-transfer and excited states. In parallel, the substantially nonconjugated bridge of oligo­(p-xylene)­s exhibited larger attenuation values (β = 0.12 for kFEX and 0.14 Å–1 for kDEX). These results provide deep insight into the unique photodynamics of electronically strongly coupled D–B–A systems involving exciplex.

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