In
this study, we report the utilization of BODIPY-(Zn)Porphyrin
hybrids in photocatalytic H2 production from water. These
entities were applied as photosensitizers upon their chemisorption
onto the surface of platinum-doped titanium dioxide nanoparticles
(Pt-TiO2), which acted as photocatalysts. To evaluate the
impact of the different connectivity between the chromophores in photocatalytic
in H2 evolution, we employed two diverse BODIPY-(Zn)Porphyrin
entities, in which the BODIPY moiety is either covalently attached
(BDP-Por) or axially coordinated (BDP(Im)-Por) with the (Zn)Porphyrin. The covalently connected dyad (BDP-Por) presented higher catalytic activity (17 500 TONs) compared
to the axial coordinated (BDP(Im)-Por, 13 700
TONs). In BDP-Por dyad, an additional BDP(Im) moiety was introduced and the formed hybrid (BDP-Por-BDP(Im)) outperformed the aforementioned systems, due to the enhanced light
harvesting ability. Overall, we developed highly efficient dye-sensitized
photocatalytic systems (DSPs) based on noble-metal-free photosensitizers
reaching 18 600 turnover numbers (TONs) and 225 mmol(H2) g(cat)−1 h–1.