Controlling the rate of electron transfer between a quantum dot and a tri-ruthenium molecular cluster by tuning the chemistry of the interface

Phys Chem Chem Phys. 2012 Oct 28;14(40):13794-801. doi: 10.1039/c2cp40827a. Epub 2012 May 15.

Abstract

Ultrafast transient absorption measurements reveal that the rate of photoinduced electron transfer (PET) from colloidal CdSe quantum dots (QDs) to oxo-centered triruthenium clusters (Ru(3)O) depends on the structure of the chemical headgroup by which the Ru(3)O clusters adsorb to the QDs. Complexes comprising QDs and Ru(3)O clusters adsorbed through a pyridine-4-carboxylic acid ligand (nic-Ru(3)O) have an intrinsic PET rate constant of (4.9 ± 0.9) × 10(9) s(-1) whereas complexes comprising QDs and Ru(3)O clusters adsorbed through a 4-mercaptopyridine ligand (thiol-Ru(3)O) have an intrinsic PET rate constant of (36 ± 7) × 10(9) s(-1). Cyclic voltammetry measurements of nic-Ru(3)O and thiol-Ru(3)O yield reduction potentials vs. Ag/AgCl of -0.93 V for both clusters, and density functional theory calculations of the nic-Ru(3)O and thiol-Ru(3)O clusters yield internal reorganization energies for the cluster radical anion of -0.17 eV and -0.19 eV, respectively. The small differences in driving force and reorganization energy between the two complexes rule out these parameters as possible explanations for the factor-of-seven difference in the rate constants for PET. The difference in the observed rates of PET for the two complexes is therefore attributable to a difference in donor-acceptor electronic coupling, which, according to electronic structure calculations, is modulated by the torsional angle between the Ru(3)O core of the cluster and the functionalized pyridine ligand that bridges the cluster to the QD surface.