4.8 Article

Controlled Photoinduced Generation of Visual Partially and Fully Charge Separated States in Viologen Analogues

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 143, Issue 5, Pages 2232-2238

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c10183

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [91545201, 21827813, 22073102, 21801071]
  2. Chinese Academy of Sciences [XDB20010100, YJKYYQ20180006, QYZDB-SSW-SLH020]

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A unique method was used to generate a partially charge separated state with a long lifetime during the decay of excited states for viologen analogues, which is significant for photochromic compounds and other applications. The findings shed light on the relaxation processes of excited states and offer a potential design strategy for multicolor photochromism and efficient light-energy conversion.
Charge-separated states with a lifetime scale of seconds or longer not only favor studies using various steady-state analysis techniques but are important for light-energy conversion and other applications. Through a steric-hindrance-induced method, unprecedented photoinduced generation of a partially charge separated (PCS) state with a lifetime of days has been detected in the visual mode during the decay of excited states to a commonly observed fully charge separated (FCS) state for viologen analogues. One pale yellow 4,4'-bipyridine-based metalloviologen compound, with an interannular dihedral angle of 1.84 degrees in 4,4'-bipyridine, directly decays to the purple FCS state after photoexcitation. The other pale yellow compound, with a similar coordination framework but a larger interannular dihedral angle (33.74 degrees), changes first to a yellow PCS state and then relaxes slowly (in the dark in Ar, ca. 2 days; 70 degrees C in Ar, ca. 1 h) to the purple FCS state. The two-step coloration phenomenon is unprecedented for viologen compounds and their analogues and also rather rare for other photochromic species. EPR and Raman data reveal that photoinduced charge separation first generates univalent zinc and radicals and then the received electron in Zn(I) slowly distributes further to 4,4'-bipyridine. Reduction of pi-conjugation and a direct to indirect change in band gap account for the prolongation of the relaxation process and the capture of the PCS state. These findings help to understand and control decay processes of excited states and provide a potential design strategy for multicolor photochromism, light-energy conversion with high efficiency, or other applications.

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