The rate of charge transfer within a discrete donor–acceptor (D/A) pair is well-described by semi-classical electron transfer theory, but the effects of multiple equivalent redox sites remain less understood. We report a series of ground-state intramolecular proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) complexes designed to isolate the effects of donor number, N, while holding geometry, coupling, and driving forces constant. The [Ru(L)3−N(OH)N]2+ complexes incorporate one, two, or three identical phenolic electron donors linked to Ru through rigid phenanthroline bridges (OH = 2,4-di-tert-butyl-6-(1-methyl-1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthrolin-2-yl)phenol). Upon flash photolysis and oxidative quenching with methyl viologen (MV2+), the transient Ru(III) oxidizes an appended phenol by PCET with the hydrogen-bonded imidazole nitrogen atom functioning as the base. The rate increased by 3.4-fold and 5.7-fold (1.7-fold and 1.9-fold after statistical correction) for two- and three-donor complexes compared to the single-donor system. The supra-statistical acceleration is attributed to a reduced effective outer sphere reorganization energy (λm) modeled by a partially shared solvent reaction coordinate, in which a subset of solvent dipoles is already oriented to stabilize charge from any donor. The final phenoxyl radical state is localized due to the transfer of a proton, and the recombination reaction with the viologen radical is not accelerated. These results demonstrate the effects of solvent dynamics on intramolecular PCET rates, offering a new strategy for the design of synthetic charge transfer systems.
Manbeck, Gerald F., DiMarco, Brian N., Rotundo, Laura, Polyansky, Dmitry E., & Ertem, Mehmed Z. (2025). Correlated solvent coordinates accelerate multi-donor proton-coupled electron transfer. Chemical Science. https://doi.org/10.1039/d5sc06787a
@article{osti_3006728,
author = {Manbeck, Gerald F. and DiMarco, Brian N. and Rotundo, Laura and Polyansky, Dmitry E. and Ertem, Mehmed Z.},
title = {Correlated solvent coordinates accelerate multi-donor proton-coupled electron transfer},
annote = {The rate of charge transfer within a discrete donor–acceptor (D/A) pair is well-described by semi-classical electron transfer theory, but the effects of multiple equivalent redox sites remain less understood. We report a series of ground-state intramolecular proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) complexes designed to isolate the effects of donor number, N, while holding geometry, coupling, and driving forces constant. The [Ru(L)3−N(OH)N]2+ complexes incorporate one, two, or three identical phenolic electron donors linked to Ru through rigid phenanthroline bridges (OH = 2,4-di-tert-butyl-6-(1-methyl-1H-imidazo[4,5-f][1,10]phenanthrolin-2-yl)phenol). Upon flash photolysis and oxidative quenching with methyl viologen (MV2+), the transient Ru(III) oxidizes an appended phenol by PCET with the hydrogen-bonded imidazole nitrogen atom functioning as the base. The rate increased by 3.4-fold and 5.7-fold (1.7-fold and 1.9-fold after statistical correction) for two- and three-donor complexes compared to the single-donor system. The supra-statistical acceleration is attributed to a reduced effective outer sphere reorganization energy (λm) modeled by a partially shared solvent reaction coordinate, in which a subset of solvent dipoles is already oriented to stabilize charge from any donor. The final phenoxyl radical state is localized due to the transfer of a proton, and the recombination reaction with the viologen radical is not accelerated. These results demonstrate the effects of solvent dynamics on intramolecular PCET rates, offering a new strategy for the design of synthetic charge transfer systems.},
doi = {10.1039/d5sc06787a},
url = {https://www.osti.gov/biblio/3006728},
journal = {Chemical Science},
issn = {ISSN 2041-6520},
place = {United States},
publisher = {Royal Society of Chemistry},
year = {2025},
month = {11}}
Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL), Upton, NY (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES). Chemical Sciences, Geosciences & Biosciences Division (CSGB); USDOE Office of Science (SC), Basic Energy Sciences (BES). Scientific User Facilities (SUF)
Grant/Contract Number:
SC0012704
OSTI ID:
3006728
Report Number(s):
BNL--229185-2025-JAAM
Journal Information:
Chemical Science, Journal Name: Chemical Science; ISSN 2041-6539; ISSN 2041-6520