Multi-Stimuli Responsive Biomimetic Light-Harvesting Antennae and Macrocycles Towards Multifunctional
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IISER Mohali
Abstract
Abstract
The first and foremost event in natural photosynthesis is sunlight harvesting by well-organized
multiple chromophores usually called light-harvesting (LH) antenna complexes, followed by
ultrafast Fӧrster resonance energy transfer (FRET) and electron transfer processes. To mimic
the natural LH systems, artificial multichromophoric systems have been developed over the
decades through covalent as well as supramolecular strategies. To develop highly efficient
covalent light-harvesting antennae is very challenging since it encompasses synthetic
challenges as well as in-depth understanding and characterization of the photophysical
phenomena. Furthermore, by virtue of their multiple absorption/emission bands tunable by
multiple stimuli (temperature, pH, redox potentials, metal ions), artificial LH small molecular
antennae can serve as stimuli-responsive smart materials, a barely explored area and the central
theme of this thesis. This work intends to address the design and synthesis of artificial LH
systems that not only mimic the efficient and fast FRET and electron transfer of natural
systems, but have also exhibited new and emergent multi-stimuli responsive photophysical
properties. In the third chapter, molecular triads based on perylenediimide (PDI) and aza-
BODIPY have been synthesized and characterized for efficient FRET as well as for appreciable
electron mobility, multi-stimuli responsive photophysical behaviour towards temperature
(ratiometric temperature sensors) and metal-ions (FRET turn-off metal sensors). [1] To extend
the absorption of LH antennae over a broad spectral window, red-green-blue (RGB) antenna
was synthesized in the fourth chapter, which showed cascade FRET from naphthalimide to PDI
to aza-BODIPY. It exhibited multi-stimuli responsive selective spectral band tuning with
temperature, pH, redox stimuli and applications were demonstrated as multifunctional sensors
as well as tunable fluorescent inks. [2] In the fifth chapter, inspired by the cyclic arrangement of
bacteriochlorophylls in the natural LH system of purple bacteria, two metal-free macrocycles
[1+1] and [2+2] were synthesized composed of covalently connected PDI and aza-BODIPY
and characterized for efficient FRET from PDI to aza-BODIPY, followed by the investigation
of their multi-stimuli responsive behaviour and FRET-enhanced photocatalytic responses
towards photooxidation reaction. [3] In the sixth chapter, dyads composed of PDI and styryl-
BODIPY were synthesized, where the PDI was attached through one of the -positions of
mono- or di-styryl-BODIPYs. These dyads showed ultrafast charge transfer from styryl-
BODIPYs to PDI as revealed by steady state and transient absorption studies and analysis. [4]
The talk will conclude with summary and future perspectives of these developed systems in
the application areas of optoelectronics as well as FRET photocatalysis.