BECAS
EZQUERRA RIEGA Sergio Dario
artículos
Título:
A case-study on the photophysics of chalcogen-substituted zinc(II) phthalocyanines
Autor/es:
EZQUERRA RIEGA, SERGIO D.; GUTIERREZ SUBURU, MATIAS E.; RODRÍGUEZ, HERNÁN B.; LANTAÑO, BEATRIZ; KLEINSCHMIDT, MARTIN; MARIAN, CHRISTEL M.; STRASSERT, CRISTIAN A.
Revista:
CHEMISTRY-A EUROPEAN JOURNAL
Editorial:
WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
Referencias:
Lugar: Weinheim; Año: 2024
ISSN:
0947-6539
Resumen:
Singlet oxygen has been widely applied in different disciplines such as medicine (photodynamic therapy or blood sterilization), remediation (wastewater treatment) or industrial processes (fine chemicals synthesis). Particularly, it can be conveniently generated by energy transfer between a photosensitizer’s triplet state and triplet molecular dioxygen upon irradiation with visible light. Among the best photosensitizers, substituted zinc(II) phthalocyanines are prominent due to their excellent photophysical properties, which can be tuned by structural modifications, such as halogen- and chalcogen-atom substitution. These patterns allow for the enhancement of spin-orbit coupling, commonly attributed to the heavy atom effect, which correlates with the atomic number (𝑍) and the spin-orbit coupling constant (𝜉) of the introduced heteroatom. Herein, a fully systematic analysis of the effect exerted by chalcogen atoms on the photophysical characteristics (absorption and fluorescence properties, lifetimes and singlet oxygen photogeneration), involving 30 custom-made β-tetrasubstituted chalcogen-bearing zinc(II) phthalocyanines is described and evaluated regarding the heavy atom effect. Besides, the intersystem crossing rate constants are estimated by several independent methods and a quantitative profile of the heavy atom by using linear correlations between relative intersystem crossing rates and relative atomic numbers is provided. Good linear trends for both intersystem crossing rates (S1-T1 and T1-S0) were obtained, with a dependency scaling as 𝑍0.4 and 𝜉0.2. The trend shows to be independent of the solvent and temperature.