2015
DOI: 10.1142/s1088424615500492
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Facile synthesis, spectroscopic and electrochemical properties, and theoretical calculations of porphyrin dimers with a bridging amide-bonded xanthene moiety

Abstract: A free base porphyrin dimer bridged by a flexible amide-bonded xanthene moiety and its binuclear zinc(II) complex zinc(II) complex were synthesized and characterized. Structural characterization by MS and 1 H NMR spectroscopy confirmed the bridged porphyrin dimer structure. The properties of the dimers were characterized by IR, UV-visible absorption, fluorescence and magnetic circular dichroism (MCD) spectroscopy, and electrochemistry studies. Theoretical calculations were carried out to analyze the electronic… Show more

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Cited by 11 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…Large red diamonds are used to denote the Q and B-bands of Gouterman's 4-orbital model [16] and smaller gray and green diamonds are used to denote charge transfer bands between the two porphyrin rings and higher energy porphyrin p-p* bands, respectively Q(0, 0), Q(0, 1) and B(0, 0) bands at 597, 556 and 420 nm. As was reported previously [12], it is noteworthy that the B-band signals are significantly less symmetrical than those typically observed for Zn(II) tetraphenylporphyrins [18]. Molecular modeling calculations made it obvious that the flexible amide bonds enable access to a wide range of conformations in which the two porphyrin rings are not in a cofacial arrangement.…”
Section: Optical Spectroscopysupporting
confidence: 57%
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“…Large red diamonds are used to denote the Q and B-bands of Gouterman's 4-orbital model [16] and smaller gray and green diamonds are used to denote charge transfer bands between the two porphyrin rings and higher energy porphyrin p-p* bands, respectively Q(0, 0), Q(0, 1) and B(0, 0) bands at 597, 556 and 420 nm. As was reported previously [12], it is noteworthy that the B-band signals are significantly less symmetrical than those typically observed for Zn(II) tetraphenylporphyrins [18]. Molecular modeling calculations made it obvious that the flexible amide bonds enable access to a wide range of conformations in which the two porphyrin rings are not in a cofacial arrangement.…”
Section: Optical Spectroscopysupporting
confidence: 57%
“…The preparation of the xanthene-bridged amide-bonded Zn(II) porphyrin dimer shown in Scheme 1 was carried out according to the literature [12]. A series of titrations were carried out to study changes in the spectroscopic properties of 5 as DABCO (0~1.0 eq.)…”
Section: Synthesis and Characterizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…[23] In addition, when theoretical calculations were carried out on the Zn(II)porphyrin dimer complex, large separations were correctly predicted between the two porphyrin rings for different possible conformations of the flexible amide-linked derivatives, and hence there was no scope for a significant interaction between the rings. [24] When Ni(II) porphyrin dimers were prepared containing both amidebond and functional building blocks, even when empirical dispersion corrections were applied, the smaller distance was preferable to predict the arrangement of the porphyrin rings in the B3LYP-optimized structures with lower molecular ground state. [21] Thus, Ni(II)porphyrin dimers maybe the suitable candidates to simplify the current system to investigate the synthesis and properties of inherently chiral porphyrin dimers.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When calculations were previously carried out on the Zn II dimer complex, large separations were predicted between the two porphyrin rings for different possible conformations of the flexible amide‐linked xanthene bridge, and hence there was no scope for a significant interaction between the rings. In the context of 5 c and 5 d , even when empirical dispersion corrections were applied so that a smaller distance was predicted between the porphyrin rings in the B3LYP‐optimized structures (Figure ), only a relatively minor interaction was predicted between the two chromophores.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%