1 research outputs found
Perfluorinated Zinc Porphyrin Sensitized Photoelectrosynthetic Cells for Enhanced TEMPO-Mediated Benzyl Alcohol Oxidation
This
research introduces a novel series of perfluorinated Zn(II)
porphyrins with positive oxidation potentials designed as sensitizers
for photoelectrosynthetic cells, with a focus on promoting the oxidation
of benzyl alcohol (BzOH) mediated by the 2,2,6,6-tetramethyl-1-piperidine N-oxyl (TEMPO) organocatalyst. Three dyes, CLICK-3, CLICK-4, and BETA-4, are meticulously
designed to explore the impact of substituents and their positions
on the perfluorinated porphyrin ring in terms of redox potentials
and energy level alignment when coupled with SnO2/TiO2-based photoanodes and TEMPO mediator. A comprehensive analysis
utilizing spectroscopy, electrochemistry, photophysics, and computational
techniques of the dyes in solution and sensitized thin films unveils
an enhanced charge-separation character in the 4D−π–1A
type BETA-4. Incorporating four dimethylamino donor groups
at the periphery of the porphyrin ring and a BTD-accepting linker
at the β-pyrrolic position equips the structure with a more
efficient donor–acceptor system. This enhancement ensures improved
light-harvesting capacity, resulting in a doubled incident
photon-to-current conversion efficiency (IPCE% ≃30%)
in the presence of LiI compared to meso-substituted
dyes CLICK-3 and CLICK-4. Sensitizing SnO2/TiO2 thin films with BETA-4 successfully
promotes the photooxidation of benzyl alcohol (BzOH) in the presence
of the rapid TEMPO radical catalyst, yielding photocurrents of approximately
125 μA/cm2 in an optimized TBPy/LiClO4/ACN electrolyte. Notably, when lithium bis(trifluoromethanesulfonyl)imide
(LiTFSI) replaces TBPy as the base for TEMPO-catalyzed BzOH oxidation,
a remarkable photocurrent of around 800 μA/cm2 is
achieved, marking one of the highest values reported for this photoelectrochemical
reaction to date. This study underscores that the proper functionalization
of perfluorinated zinc porphyrins positions these dyes as ideal candidates
for sensitizing SnO2/TiO2 in the photodriven
oxidation of BzOH. It also highlights the crucial role of carefully
tuning electrolyte composition based on the electronic properties
of molecular sensitizers