“…On account of their substantial absorption in the visible region (400-450 nm Soret band, and 500-700 nm Q-bands) (Kim et al, 2008), as well as their ability to act as electron/energy donors/ acceptors, porphyrins have been examined as artificial photosynthetic mimics (Bottari et al, 2012) and utilized in various solar cell technologies (Urbani et al, 2014;Zeng et al, 2020;Piradi et al, 2021;Molina et al, 2023). In addition, porphyrins (particularly metalloporphyrins), are considered as one of the most effective class of biomimetic catalysts (both in photo-and electrocatalysis), due to their significant catalytic activity in a great variety of chemical processes (Lin et al, 2021;Huang et al, 2022;Nikoloudakis et al, 2022;O'Neill et al, 2022;Domingo-Tafalla et al, 2023). Because of their tuneable optoelectronic properties, porphyrins are also used in molecular recognition and metal-ion sensing applications (Ogoshi and Mizutani, 1999;Ishizuka et al, 2022).…”