论文标题
用基于己嗪的分子光催化剂对水的光氧化:光谱和计算化学的见解
Photooxidation of water with heptazine-based molecular photocatalysts: Insights from spectroscopy and computational chemistry
论文作者
论文摘要
我们提出了最近的关节光谱和计算研究的一个观察,该研究提供了对甲基氢键复合物(Hz)发色团的光化学的新见解,该复合物具有羟基底物分子(水和苯酚)。已经发现,Hz,三氨基甲烷 - 甲烷(TAHZ)的功能化衍生物可以在均匀的光化学反应中氧化水和苯酚。这允许探索质子偶联电子转移(PCET)过程的基本机制,该过程涉及与化学可调的分子发色团的良好定义的复合物中的水光氧化反应,并具有化学上可调的底物分子。突出显示了Hz分子及其衍生物的激发电子状态的独特性能。与PCET反应相关的势能景观的特征是明智的计算研究。这些数据为通过泵浦螺旋螺旋光管检查证明了对塔兹 - 苯酚复合物中PCET反应的合理激光控制的基础,该光谱揭示了通过反应性分子间电转移态的无反射性局部激发态的相互作用而产生的分支机制。从这些结果推断出来,我们提出了一种一般场景,将复杂的光诱导的水分裂反应拆开为简单的顺序轻驱动的单电子氧化还原反应,然后是简单的深色自由基激进重组反应。
We present a conspectus of recent joint spectroscopic and computational studies which provided novel insight into the photochemistry of hydrogen-bonded complexes of the heptazine (Hz) chromophore with hydroxylic substrate molecules (water and phenol). It was found that a functionalized derivative of Hz, tri-anisole-heptazine (TAHz), can photooxidize water and phenol in a homogeneous photochemical reaction. This allows the exploration of the basic mechanisms of the proton-coupled electron-transfer (PCET) process involved in the water photooxidation reaction in well-defined complexes of chemically tunable molecular chromophores with chemically tunable substrate molecules. The unique properties of the excited electronic states of the Hz molecule and derivatives thereof are highlighted. The potential energy landscape relevant for the PCET reaction has been characterized by judicious computational studies. These data provided the basis for the demonstration of rational laser control of PCET reactions in TAHz-phenol complexes by pump-push-probe spectroscopy, which sheds light on the branching mechanisms occurring by the interaction of nonreactive locally excited states of the chromophore with reactive intermolecular charge-transfer states. Extrapolating from these results, we propose a general scenario which unravels the complex photoinduced water-splitting reaction into simple sequential light-driven one-electron redox reactions followed by simple dark radical-radical recombination reactions.