Charge-transfer dynamics
and interligand electron transfer (ILET)
phenomena play a pivotal role in dye-sensitizers, mostly represented
by the Ru-based polypyridyl complexes, for TiO2 and ZnO-based
solar cells. Starting from metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT)
excited states, charge dynamics and ILET can influence the overall
device efficiency. In this letter, we focus on N34– dye ( [Ru(dcbpy)2(NCS)2]4–, dcbpy = 4,4′-dicarboxy-2,2′-bipyridine) to provide
a first direct observation with high time resolution (<20 fs)
of the ultrafast electron exchange between bpy-like ligands. ILET
is observed in water solution after photoexcitation in the ∼400 nm
MLCT band, and assessment of its ultrafast time-scale is here given
through a real-time electronic dynamics simulation on the basis of
state-of-the-art electronic structure methods. Indirect effects of
water at finite temperature are also disentangled by investigating
the system in a symmetric gas-phase structure. As main result, remarkably,
the ILET mechanism appears to be based upon a purely electronic evolution
among the dense, experimentally accessible, MLCT excited states manifold
at ∼400 nm, which rules out nuclear–electronic
couplings and proves further the importance of the dense electronic
manifold in improving the efficiency of dye sensitizers in solar cell
devices