“…The solvent relaxation response to the solute out of equilibrium plays a crucial role in determining rates and energetics of any physicochemical process in solution. − In the past two decades, because of the rapid development of ultrafast spectroscopic techniques, an increasing interest has been devoted to the role played by the solvent in the ultrafast dynamics of photoexcited CT states, which are relevant in many photochemical and photophysical phenomena in different fields. − Experimental research has been assisted by computational studies able to deliver atomistic insights into the solvent response dynamics and, in turn, on its impact on the electronic structure of the photoexcited solute. ,− Within this framework, however, ultrafast experiments on solvated transition-metal (TM) complexes are relatively few and recent, ,,− despite their ubiquitous employment in photovoltaics, optoelectronic devices, and medical applications. − Most of the published work focuses on polypyridine complexes, , in particular on the prototype [Ru(bpy) 3 ] 2+ complex, where the electron localization–delocalization dynamics following the photoinduced CT has been widely studied and debated. ,,,− In the past years, solvent-dependent analysis of the transient absorption spectra, ,,− supported by computational modeling, ,,− suggested the idea of a rather complex solvent response dynamics, with the solvent as a principal actor in the modification of the solute’s excited-state charge distribution, often through the formation or breaking of strongly interacting solute–solvent clusters.…”