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Electron Transfer Through Dendrimers in Solution Deborah Evans University of New Mexico Department of Chemistry and the Albuquerque High Performance Computing Center
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Dendrimers are synthetic realizations of Caley trees: Electron Transfer: Energy Transfer:
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Electron Transfer Through Dendrimers: Extensively branched macromolecules form self-assembled monolayers Crooks et al, JACS, 120 (1998) Abruna and coworkers Langmuir, 15 (1999)
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Electro-active dendrimers and encapsulation Cores: Fe-S, porphyrin, ferrocene: Gorman et al, JACS, 121 (1999)
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STM and cyclic voltammetry Gorman et al JACS, 121 (1999)
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Electron Transfer and Molecular Electronics: It's All About Contacts K.W. Hipps, Science The goal of building sophisticated electronic devices from individual molecules has spurred studies of single-molecules. The primary problems facing the molecular electronics designer are: measuring and predicting electron transport. Molecular “wires”: Molecular break-junction experiments Reed et al JACS, 121 (1999)
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Electron transport through linear chains: Nitzan et al, JPC, 104, 2001 Pollard and Friesner, JPC, 99, 1995 bridge electron transfer: interferences and solvent dephasing
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ET through solvated branched molecules Photo-induced intra-molecular transfer Wasielewski et al JACS, 121 (1999)
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Simulation of ET in solvated dendrimers: Surface-induced distortions Experiments have many competing processes: Intra-dendrimer transfer solvent-induced relaxation / diffusion surface effects Crooks et al, Anal. Chem., 71 (1999)
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D/A superexchange Donors or Acceptors in solution:
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Previous Modeling Extended systems: infinite Caley trees localized states dimensionality (simply connected; branching) Electron Transfer Pathways: Electron transfer rate: |T| 2 ~ 1 / K Disorder: creates 1-D pathways to enhance rate K Beratan, Onuchic, 1994
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Solvent effects on ET Solvent-dependent ET rates flexible hydrophobic/hydrophilic rigid dendrimers: Newhouse, Evans, 2000. kJ/mol Classical MC and MD studies of 1-4 generations:
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Simulation of condensed phase ET Split-operator methods : Time-dependent simulation of photo- induced electron transfer Solvent influence included as time- dependent fluctuations in the Hamiltonian A modified Checkerboard algorithm exploits the Caley tree connectivity
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Phenomenological Density Matrix Approach : Solvent influence included as phenomenological decay rates Steady-state rate constants determined for effective electron transfer rates through the molecular wire [Ratner, Nitzan et al, linear D-B-A] Liouville density matrix equation of motion:
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Redfield Approach : Approach used for multi-level electron transfer Solvent included in the Redfield tensor elements R ijkl Bath correlation functions taken from the high- temperature limit Reduced density matrix of the system propagated using a symplectic integrator scheme:
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Numerical Techniques : Photo-induced experiments (population dynamics): Steady-State (rates): : constant
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Solvated Dendrimer models: Tight-binding model for dendrimer: Solvent – system coupling coupling strength ~ 5-10 Assume Markovian limit E ~ 1000 ; ~ 100
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Results from numerical simulations: Dendrimer topology/geometry Solvent-induced relaxation Donor/acceptor energies Side-branch chemistry Thermal relaxation of the bridge Effects of: On: electron transfer rates rectification switching conductance
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Photo-induced Electron Transfer (3N) (4N) (5N) condensed dendrimers (14) (33) (52) extended dendrimers
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Elicker, Evans, JPC 1999
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Solvent relaxation effects:
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Dendrimer bridges vs linear chains Steady-state rates: Evans et al, JPC, 2001 dendrimer linear
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Generalized Chains
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Forward Backward
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Electronic Effects in Molecular Wires: molecule between two metal contacts: Conductance ( |G(V)| 2) vs voltage (units of E b )
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Bridge Topology and Conductance linear chains side-branch structure side-branch position
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second-generation number of side-branches longer bridges third-generation DENDRIMERS:
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Steady-state rate: SS Kalyanaraman and Evans, 2001
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Landauer formula:
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Photoinduced Electron Transfer through a dendrimer to acceptors diffusing in solution Aida et al, JACS 118 (1996) GOAL: to measure k ET for electron transfer through the dendrimer framework
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Simulations of solvent phase Photo-induced Electron Transfer to diffusing acceptors: Classical MD simulation of diffusing viologens ET transfer rate to acceptors Electron dynamics through the dendrimer following photoexcitation (taking into account solvent dynamics) Mallick and Evans, 2002
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Electron transfer rate from the dendrimer periphery to the diffusing viologens diffusing viologens: Depends on time: Use Marcus expression with water as the solvent: ET to viologens is irreversible: treat the sites as absorbing boundary conditions
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Classical Molecular Dynamics Simulations: NVE dynamics : dendrimer with viologen acceptorsin water
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L(t) Rate of transfer to viologen is a dynamic variable that evolves along a simulation trajectory:
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The second generation dendrimer: For the Aida experiments: rate is dominated by the intermolecular ET
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The fourth generation dendrimer: Experimental studies: Observed k ET = 2.6 × 10 9 s -1
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Conclusions: Electron transfer in dendrimers: photo-induced steady-state Electron transfer rate depends on: branching structure enhanced over linear “wires” solvent dynamics time-scale and coupling strength intermolecular ET rate to diffusing acceptors
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Dendrimer RDF Malone, Evans 2000. r
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