Excited singlet and triplet state electron-transfer reactions of aluminium(III) sulphonated phthalocyanine
Abstract
Conventional and nanosecond flash photolysis has been used to study the excited-state reactions of aluminium(III) sulphonated phthalocyanine (AlSP) with benzohydroquinone (BQH2), methyl viologen (MV), benzyl viologen (BV) and anthraquinone-2,6-disodium sulphonate (AQDS). The fluorescent state of AlSP was quenched by all of these reagents at rates close to the diffusion-controlled limit; however, no separated electron-transfer products were detected from the reaction with BV, MV or AQDS despite the electrostatic repulsion between the phthalocyanine and semiquinone radical anions. In contrast, quenching by BQH2 produced a transient (τ≃ 100 ns), which is attributed to a long-lived geminate ion pair, from which separated ions escaped.
The triplet state of AlSP did not react with AQDS, BV or MV, but it was quenched by oxygen and BQH2. Separated ions were produced three times as efficiently from the triplet reaction of AlSP with BQH2 than from the excited-singlet-state reaction.