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Article Abstract

Porphyrin-based metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) offer a unique platform for building porous donor-acceptor networks that exhibit long-lived charge separation and transport upon incorporation of electron acceptor guest species. Here, porphyrin-based MOFs, PCN-222-(H) and PCN-222-(Zn), synthesized as nanoparticle suspensions, are successfully infiltrated with fullerene acceptor molecules, C or PCBM, in both polar and nonpolar solvent environments. The location and relative binding strength of these guest species are evaluated through a combination of N physisorption measurements, photoluminescence quenching, and UV-vis absorption titration experiments. Semiempirical tight binding calculations are used to screen potential locations of the fullerene guest within the MOF pores, and hybrid density functional theory (DFT)-computed interaction energies confirm the energetically favorable positions. The fundamental photophysics of these donor-acceptor host-guest combinations are probed using ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy. Sub-picosecond electron transfer involving initial exciplex population is observed, with slow charge recombination lifetimes on the order of τ ∼1 ns for all systems in both dimethylformamide and 1,4-dioxane. Charge recombination occurs through population of fullerene and/or framework porphyrin triplet states depending on the porphyrin metalation status. The photophysics of the fullerene-loaded MOFs are discussed in the context of relevant porphyrin-fullerene donor-acceptor molecules to highlight the unique role of the framework environment in dictating photoinduced electron transfer and decay pathways.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC12333347PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.5c00161DOI Listing

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