Energy transfer within self-assembled cyclic multichromophoric arrays based on orthogonally arranged donor–acceptor building blocks

Author:

Karakostas Nikolaos1234,Kaloudi-Chantzea Antonia1234,Martinou Elisabeth1234,Seintis Kostas5674,Pitterl Florian891011,Oberacher Herbert891011,Fakis Mihalis5674,Kallitsis Joannis K.12674,Pistolis George1234

Affiliation:

1. NCSR “Demokritos”

2. Institute of Nanosciences and Nanotechnology (INN)

3. 153 10 Athens

4. Greece

5. Department of Physics

6. University of Patras

7. 26500 Patras

8. Institute of Legal Medicine and Core Facility Metabolomics

9. Innsbruck Medical University

10. 6020 Innsbruck

11. Austria

12. Department of Chemistry

Abstract

We herein present the coordination-driven supramolecular synthesis and photophysics of a [4+4] and a [2+2] assembly, built up by alternately collocated donor–acceptor chromophoric building blocks based, respectively, on the boron dipyrromethane (Bodipy) and perylene bisimide dye (PBI). In these multichromophoric scaffolds, the intensely absorbing/emitting dipoles of the Bodipy subunit are, by construction, cyclically arranged at the corners and aligned perpendicular to the plane formed by the closed polygonal chain comprising the PBI units. Steady-state and fs time-resolved spectroscopy reveal the presence of efficient energy transfer from the vertices (Bodipys) to the edges (PBIs) of the polygons. Fast excitation energy hopping – leading to a rapid excited state equilibrium among the low energy perylene-bisimide chromophores – is revealed by fluorescence anisotropy decays. The dynamics of electronic excitation energy hopping between the PBI subunits was approximated on the basis of a theoretical model within the framework of Förster energy transfer theory. All energy-transfer processes are quantitatively describable with Förster theory. The influence of structural deformations and orientational fluctuations of the dipoles in certain kinetic schemes is discussed.

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)

Subject

Physical and Theoretical Chemistry

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