29 research outputs found

    Ru(II)-Dppz Derivatives and Their Interactions with DNA: Thirty Years and Counting

    No full text
    Transition metal complexes with dppz-type ligands (dppz = dipyrido[3,2-a:2′,3′-c]phenazine) are extensively studied and attract a considerable amount of attention, becoming, from the very beginning and increasingly over time, a powerful tool for investigating the structure of the DNA helix. In particular, [Ru(bpy)2(dppz)]2+ and [Ru(phen)2(dppz)]2+ and their derivatives were extensively investigated as DNA light-switches. The purpose of this mini-review, which is not and could not be exhaustive, was to first introduce DNA and its importance at a biological level and research in the field of small molecules that are capable of interacting with it, in all its forms. A brief overview is given of the results obtained on the Ru-dppz complexes that bind to DNA. The mechanism of the light-switch active in this type of species is also briefly introduced along with its effects on structural modifications on both the dppz ligand and the ancillary ligands. Finally, a brief mention is made of biological applications and the developments obtained due to new spectroscopic techniques, both for understanding the mechanism of action and for cellular imaging applications

    Synthesis and Photophysics Characterization of Boronic Styril and Distyryl BODIPYs for Water-Based Dye-Sensitized Solar Cells

    No full text
    In this study, two boronic acid BODIPYs are obtained through a microwave-assisted Knoevenagel reaction. The aim is to use them for the first time as dyes in a photosensitized solar cell (DSSC) to mimic chlorophyll photosynthesis, harvesting solar light and converting it into electricity. The microwave-assisted Knoevenagel reaction is a straightforward approach to extending the molecular conjugation of the dye and is applied for the first time to synthesize BODIPY’s boronic acid derivatives. These derivatives have proved to be very useful for covalent deposition on titania. This work studies the photo-physical and electrochemical properties. Moreover, the photovoltaic performances of these two new dyes as sensitizers for DSSC are discussed. Experimental data show that both dyes exhibit photosensitizing activities in acetonitrile and water. In particular, in all the experiments, distyryl BODIPY was more efficient than styryl BODIPY. In this study, demonstrating the use of a natural component as a water-based electrolyte for boronic BODIPY sensitizers, we open new possibilities for the development of water-based solar cells

    Multichromophoric hybrid species made of perylene bisimide derivatives and Ru(ii) and Os(ii) polypyridine subunits

    No full text
    Herein, the synthesis and the photophysical and redox properties of a new perylene bisimide (PBI) species (L), bearing two 1,10-phenanthroline (phen) ligands at the two imide positions of the PBI, and its dinuclear Ru(II) and Os(II) complexes, [(bpy)2Ru(\u3bc-L)Ru(bpy)2](PF6)4 (Ru2; bpy = 2,2\u2032-bipyridine) and [(Me2-bpy)2Os(\u3bc-L)Os(Me2-bpy)2](PF6)4 (Os2; Me2-bpy = (4,4\u2032-dimethyl)-2,2\u2032-bipyridine), are reported. The absorption spectra of the compounds are dominated by the structured bands of the PBI subunit due to the lowest-energy spin-allowed \u3c0\u2013\u3c0* transition. The spin-allowed MLCT transitions in Ru2 and Os2 are inferred by the absorption at 350\u2013470 nm, where the PBI absorption is negligible. The absorption band extends towards the red region for Os2 due to the spin-forbidden MLCT transitions, intensified by the heavy osmium center. The reduction processes of the compounds are dominated by two successive mono-electronic PBI-based processes, which in the metal complexes are slightly shifted compared to the free ligand. On oxidation, both metal complexes undergo an apparent bi-electronic process (at 1.31 V vs. SCE for Ru2 and 0.77 V for Os2), attributed to the simultaneous one-electron oxidation of the two weakly-interacting metal centers. In Ru2 and Os2, the intense fluorescence of L subunit (\u3bbmax, 535 nm; \u3c4, 4.3 ns; \u3a6, 0.91) is fully quenched, mainly by photoinduced electron transfer from the metal centers, on the ps timescale (time constant, 11 ps in Ru2 and 3 ps in Os2). Such photoinduced electron transfer leads to the formation of a charge-separated state, which directly decays to the ground state in about 70 ps in Os2, but produces the triplet \u3c0\u2013\u3c0* state of the PBI subunit in 35 ps in Ru2. The results provide information on the excited-state processes of the hybrid species combining two dominant classes of chromophore/luminophore species, the PBI and the metal polypyridine complexes, and can be used for future design on new hybrid species with made-to-order properties

    INSIGHT INTO PHOTOCATALYTIC WATER OXIDATION BY A TETRARUTHENIUM MOLECULAR CATALYST AND RUTHENIUM POLYPYRIDINE SENSITIZERS

    No full text
    Water oxidation is a key step common to most artificial photosynthetic reaction schemes.[1,2] Photocatalytic water oxidation can be accomplished in homogeneous systems upon irradiation of aqueous solutions containing a sensitizer, a sacrificial electron acceptor and a catalyst. In such systems two photochemical mechanisms are in principle available towards water oxidation: (i) a typical biomimetic pathway, involving first oxidation of the excited sensitizer by the sacrificial acceptor and subsequent hole transfer to the catalyst, and (ii) a less usual (“anti-biomimetic”) one, involving first oxidation of the catalyst by the excited sensitizer followed by electron shift to the sacrificial agent. Herein we show a comparison between two photochemical systems involving persulfate as the sacrificial acceptor, a tetraruthenium polyoxometalate as the oxygen evolving catalyst, and either the standard Ru(bpy)32+ complex [3] or a tetranuclear ruthenium polypyridine dendrimer [4] as the photosensitizer. With these sensitizers, different photochemical pathways, (i) or (ii), are followed. Moreover, while in the former case the molecular interactions between the sensitizing and catalytic moieties are detrimental for the photocatalytic mechanism, in the latter case they are of fundamental importance to drive the electron flow towards the right direction in view of an efficient water oxidation catalysis

    Photoinduced Water Oxidation in Chitosan Nanostructures Containing Covalently Linked RuII Chromophores and Encapsulated Iridium Oxide Nanoparticles

    No full text
    The luminophore Ru(bpy)2(dcbpy)2+ (bpy=2,2’-bipyridine; dcbpy=4,4’-dicarboxy-2,2’-bipyridine) is covalently linked to a chitosan polymer; crosslinking by tripolyphosphate produced Ru-decorated chitosan fibers (NS-RuCh), with a 20 : 1 ratio between chitosan repeating units and RuII chromophores. The properties of the RuII compound are unperturbed by the chitosan structure, with NS-RuCh exhibiting the typical metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) absorption and emission bands of RuII complexes. When crosslinks are made in the presence of IrO2 nanoparticles, such species are encapsulated within the nanofibers, thus generating the IrO2⊂NS-RuCh system, in which both RuII photosensitizers and IrO2 water oxidation catalysts are within the nanofiber structures. NS-RuCh and IrO2⊂NS-RuCh have been characterized by dynamic light scattering, scanning electronic microscopy, and energy-dispersive X-ray analysis, which indicated a 2 : 1 ratio between RuII chromophores and IrO2 species. Photochemical water oxidation has been investigated by using IrO2⊂NS-RuCh as the chromophore/catalyst assembly and persulfate anions as the sacrificial species: photochemical water oxidation yields O2 with a quantum yield (Φ) of 0.21, definitely higher than the Φ obtained with a similar solution containing separated Ru(bpy)32+ and IrO2 nanoparticles (0.05) or with respect to that obtained when using NS-RuCh and “free” IrO2 nanoparticles (0.10). A fast hole-scavenging process (rate constant, 7×104 s−1) involving the oxidized photosensitizer and the IrO2 catalyst within the IrO2⊂NS-RuCh system is behind the improved photochemical quantum yield of IrO2⊂NS-RuCh

    Photoinduced Intercomponent Processes in Selectively Addressable Bichromophoric Dyads Made of Linearly Arranged Ru(II) Terpyridine and Expanded Pyridinium Components

    No full text
    International audienceThree new linearly arranged bichromophoric systems 1–3 have been prepared, and their photophysical properties have been studied, taking also advantage of femtosecond pump–probe transient absorption spectroscopy. The three compounds contain the same chromophores, that is a Ru(II)-terpy-like species and a fused expanded bipyridinium (FEBP) unit, separated by three different, variously methylated biphenylene-type bridges. The chromophores have been selected to be selectively addressable, and excitation involving the Ru-based or the FEBP-based dyes results in different excited-state decays. Upon Ru-based excitation at 570 nm, oxidative photoinduced electron transfer (OPET) takes place in 1–3 from the 3MLCT state; however, the charge-separated species does not accumulate, indicating that the charge recombination rate constant exceeds the OPET rate constant. Upon excitation of the organic dye at 400 nm, the FEBP-based 1π–π* level is prepared, which undergoes a series of intercomponent decay events, including (i) electron-exchange energy transfer leading to the MLCT manifold (SS-EnT), which successively decays according to 570 nm excitation, and (ii) reductive photoinduced electron transfer (RPET), leading to the preparation of the charge-separated (CS) state. Reductive PET, involving the FEBP-based singlet state, is much faster than oxidative PET, involving the MLCT triplet state, essentially because of driving force reasons. The rate constant of CR is intermediate between the rate constants of OPET and RPET, and this makes 1–3 capable to selectively read the 400 nm excitation as an active input to prepare the CS state, whereas excitation at wavelengths longer than 480 nm is inefficient to accumulate the CS state. Moreover, intriguing differences between the rate constants of the various processes in 1–3 have been analyzed and interpreted according to the superexchange theory for electron transfer. This allowed us to uncover the role of the electron-transfer and hole-transfer superexchange pathways in promoting the various intercomponent photoinduced decay processes occurring in 1–3

    Water oxidation catalysis upon evolution of molecular Co(III) cubanes in aqueous media

    No full text
    The increasing global energy demand has stimulated great, recent efforts in investigating new solutions for artificial photosynthesis, a potential source of clean and renewable solar fuels. In particular, according to the generally accepted modular approach, aimed at optimising separately the different compartments of the entire process, many studies have focused on the development of catalytic systems for water oxidation to oxygen. While in recent years there have been many reports on new catalytic systems, the mechanism and the active intermediates operating the catalysis have been less investigated. Well-defined, molecular catalysts, constituted by transition metals stabilised by a suitable ligand pool, could help in solving this aspect. However, in some cases molecular species have been shown to evolve to active metal oxides, that constitute the other side of this catalysis dichotomy. In this paper, we address the evolution of tetracobalt(III) cubanes, stabilised by a pyridine/acetate ligand pool, to active species that perform water oxidation to oxygen. Primary evolution of the cubane in aqueous solution is likely initiated by removal of an acetate bridge, opening the coordination sphere of the Cobalt centres. This Cobalt derivative, where the pristine ligands still impact on the reactivity, shows enhanced electron transfer rates to Ru(bpy)33+ (hole scavenging), within a photocatalytic cycle with Ru(bpy)32+ as the photosensitiser and S2O82- as the electron sink. A more accentuated evolution occurs under continuous irradiation, where Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy reveals the formation of Co(II) intermediates, likely contributing to the catalytic process that evolves oxygen. All together, these results confirm the relevant effect of molecular species, in particular in fostering the rate of the electron transfer processes involved in the light activated cycles, pivotal for the design of a photoactive device.The increasing global energy demand has stimulated great recent efforts in investigating new solutions for artificial photosynthesis, a potential source of clean and renewable solar fuel. In particular, according to the generally accepted modular approach aimed at optimising separately the different compartments of the entire process, many studies have focused on the development of catalytic systems for water oxidation to oxygen. While in recent years there have been many reports on new catalytic systems, the mechanism and the active intermediates operating the catalysis have been less investigated. Well-defined, molecular catalysts, constituted by transition metals stabilised by a suitable ligand pool, could help in solving this aspect. However, in some cases molecular species have been shown to evolve to active metal oxides that constitute the other side of this catalysis dichotomy. In this paper, we address the evolution of tetracobalt(III) cubanes, stabilised by a pyridine/acetate ligand pool, to active species that perform water oxidation to oxygen. Primary evolution of the cubane in aqueous solution is likely initiated by removal of an acetate bridge, opening the coordination sphere of the cobalt centres. This cobalt derivative, where the pristine ligands still impact on the reactivity, shows enhanced electron transfer rates to Ru(bpy)(3)(3+) (hole scavenging) within a photocatalytic cycle with Ru(bpy)(3)(2+) as the photosensitiser and S2O82- as the electron sink. A more accentuated evolution occurs under continuous irradiation, where Electron Paramagnetic Resonance (EPR) spectroscopy reveals the formation of Co(II) intermediates, likely contributing to the catalytic process that evolves oxygen. All together, these results confirm the relevant effect of molecular species, in particular in fostering the rate of the electron transfer processes involved in light activated cycles, pivotal in the design of a photoactive device

    Light-driven water oxidation with a molecular tetra-cobalt(iii) cubane cluster

    No full text
    Photoinduced water oxidation to molecular oxygen takes place in systems made of [Ru(bpy)3]2+ (bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine) as the photosensitizer, [Co4O4(O2CMe)4(py)4] (py = pyridine) as the molecular catalyst and Na2S2O8 as the sacrificial electron acceptor. The photochemical quantum yield of the process reaches the outstanding value of 30% and depends on pH and catalyst concentration. Transient absorption spectroscopy experiments aimed to clarify the first events of the photocatalytic process are also reported
    corecore