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How Do Defects in Carbon Nanostructures Regulate the Photoinduced Electron Transfer Processes? The Case of Phenine Nanotubes

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Abstract Photoinduced electron transfer is studied in a series of inclusion complexes of structurally modified phenine nanotubes (pNT) with C70 using the TD‐DFT method. Analysis of electronic properties of the… Click to show full abstract

Abstract Photoinduced electron transfer is studied in a series of inclusion complexes of structurally modified phenine nanotubes (pNT) with C70 using the TD‐DFT method. Analysis of electronic properties of the complexes shows that the electron transfer is infeasible in pNT_4d⊃C70 built on the tetrameric array of [6]cyclo‐meta‐phenylene ([6]CMP) units. However, replacing one or more [6]CMP units with a coronene moiety enables electron transfer from pNT to C70. The generation of the charge separated states from the lowest locally excited states occurs on a sub‐nanosecond time scale. Depending on the number of the [6]CMP units, the charge recombination rate varies from 1.8 ⋅ 107 to 3.1 ⋅ 102 s−1, i. e., five orders of magnitude.

Keywords: photoinduced electron; pnt c70; electron transfer; transfer; phenine nanotubes

Journal Title: Chemphyschem
Year Published: 2021

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