Tetraphenylethylene Tricycle-based Sequential Light-Harvesting System through Efficient Förster Resonance Energy Transfer for Visible Light Photocatalysis

23 September 2024, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Supramolecular assembly based on efficient Förster resonance energy transfer (FRET) provides an optimal framework for the development of substantial artificial light-harvesting systems (LHSs). In this study, a sequential two-step light-harvesting systems with FRET process was successfully established in aqueous medium where a specially designed deep blue-emitting indole derivative (PZ) served as an energy donor, a novel green-emitting tetraphenylethylene-based tricycle (TPEM) with aggregation-induced emission (AIE) functioned as a relay acceptor, and Nile red (NIR) used as the terminal acceptor. Due to good spectra overlap and close proximity between donors and acceptors, the triad system (PZ/TPEM/NIR) could occur significant energy transfer from PZ to TPEM to NIR with a ratio of 1000:40:30, affording a very high energy-transfer efficiencies (ΦET) of 98.59%. By properly optimizing the proportion of PZ/TPEM/NIR, bright white light emission was readily obtained with a CIE coordinate of (0.32, 0.33). Significantly, thanks to AIE property and large cavity of TPEM, undesired fluorescence quenching was effectively circumvented in the FRET process. The captured solar energy by PZ/TPEM/NIR assemblies can further photocatalyze Knoevenagel condensation reaction with a high yield of 95% under visible light in aqueous medium. Therefore, the tunable feature of supramolecular strategy renders the AIEgen based-macrocycle a highly promising candidate to construct efficient LHSs for photocatalysis

Keywords

Förster resonance energy transfer
light-harvesting systems
aggregation-induced emission (AIE)

Supplementary materials

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Title
Tetraphenylethylene Tricycle-based Sequential Light-Harvesting System through Efficient Förster Resonance Energy Transfer for Visible Light Photocatalysis
Description
Section A. Materials and methods Materials: Section B. Experimental details for synthesis and characterization of new compounds. Section C. Construction of artificial light-harvesting systems Section D. Investigation of the photocatalytic activity of the light harvesting systems.
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