Zinc porphyrins have been widely used as surrogates for chlorophyll
(which contains magnesium) in photosynthetic model systems and molecular
photonic devices. In order to compare the photodynamic behaviour of Mg-
and Zn-porphyrins, dimeric and star-shaped pentameric arrays comprised of
free-base (Fb) and Mg- or Zn-porphyrins with intervening diarylethyne
linkers have been prepared. A modular building block approach is used to
couple ethynyl- or iodo-substituted porphyrins in defined metallation
states (Fb, Mg or Zn)via a Pd-catalysed reaction in 2–6 h.
The resulting arrays are purified in 45–80% overall yields by
combinations of size exclusion chromatography and adsorption
chromatography (≥95% purity). High solubility of the arrays in organic
solvents facilitates chemical and spectroscopic characterization. The
star-shaped Mg
4
Fb- and Zn
4
Fb-pentamers, where the
Fb-porphyrin is at the core of the array, have pairwise interactions
similar to those of dimeric MgFb- and ZnFb-arrays. The arrays have been
investigated by static and time-resolved absorption and fluorescence
spectroscopy, as well as resonance Raman spectroscopy. The major findings
include the following. (1) The rate of singlet excited-state energy
transfer from the Mg-porphyrin to the Fb-porphyrin [(31
ps)
-1
] is comparable to that from the Zn-porphyrin to
the Fb-porphyrin [(26 ps)
-1
] in the dimeric arrays.
Qualitatively similar results are obtained for the star-shaped pentamers.
The similar rates of energy transfer for the Mg- and Zn-containing arrays
are attributed to the fact that the electronic coupling between the
metalloporphyrin and Fb-porphyrin is approximately the same for Mg-
vs. Zn-containing arrays. (2) The quantum yield of energy
transfer is slightly higher in the Mg-arrays (99.7%) than in the Zn-arrays
(99.0%) due to the longer inherent lifetime of Mg-porphyrins (10 ns)
compared with Zn-porphyrins (2.5 ns). (3) The rate of energy transfer and
the magnitude of the electronic coupling are essentially independent of
the solvent polarity and the coordination geometry of the metalloporphyrin
(four- or five-coordinate for Zn-porphyrins, five- or six-coordinate for
Mg-porphyrins). (4) Polar solvents diminish the fluorescence yield and
lifetime of the excited Fb-porphyrin in arrays containing either Mg- or
Zn-porphyrins. These effects are attributed to charge-transfer quenching
of the Fb-porphyrin by the adjacent metalloporphyrin rather than to
changes in electronic coupling. The magnitude of the diminution is greater
for the Mg-containing arrays, which is due to the greater driving force
for charge separation. (5) The Zn-containing arrays are quite robust while
the Mg-containing arrays are slightly labile toward demetallation and
photooxidation. Taken together, these results indicate that
porphyrin-based nanostructures having high energy-transfer efficiencies
can be constructed from either Mg- or Zn-porphyrins. However,
Mg-containing arrays may be superior in situations where a succession of
energy-transfer steps occurs (due to a slightly higher yield per step) or
where charge transfer is a desirable feature. On the other hand,
Zn-porphyrins are better suited when it is desirable to avoid charge
transfer quenching reactions. Accordingly, the merits of constructing a
device from Mg- vs. Zn-containing porphyrins will be determined
by the interplay of all of the above
factors.
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