1 research outputs found
Dipole-Mediated Rectification of Intramolecular Photoinduced Charge Separation and Charge Recombination
Controlling charge transfer at a
molecular scale is critical for
efficient light harvesting, energy conversion, and nanoelectronics.
Dipole-polarization electrets, the electrostatic analogue of magnets,
provide a means for âsteeringâ electron transduction
via the local electric fields generated by their permanent electric
dipoles. Here, we describe the first demonstration of the utility
of anthranilamides, moieties with ordered dipoles, for controlling
intramolecular charge transfer. Donorâacceptor dyads, each
containing a single anthranilamide moiety, distinctly rectify both
the forward photoinduced electron transfer and the subsequent charge
recombination. Changes in the observed charge-transfer kinetics as
a function of media polarity were consistent with the anticipated
effects of the anthranilamide molecular dipoles on the rectification.
The regioselectivity of electron transfer and the molecular dynamics
of the dyads further modulated the observed kinetics, particularly
for charge recombination. These findings reveal the underlying complexity
of dipole-induced effects on electron transfer and demonstrate unexplored
paradigms for molecular rectifiers