Journal of Physical Chemistry A, Vol.112, No.5, 808-817, 2008
Visible-light-driven photoreactions of [(bpy)(2)Ru(II)L]Cl-2 in aqueous solutions (bpy = bipyridine, L=1,2-bis(4-(4'-methyl)-2,2'-bipyridyl) ethene)
Visible-light-induced photoreactions of [(bpy)(2)Ru(II)L]Cl-2 (bpy = bipyridine, L = trans-1,2-bis(4-(4'-methyl)-2,2'-bipyridyl) ethene) in aqueous solution are examined. From pH titrations, it is found that the Ru complex is a stronger base (pK(a)* = 6) in the excited state than in the ground state (pK(a) = 4). Photolysis of the [(bpy)(2)Ru(II)L] complex in solutions at pH 7 and 12 led to formation of species with increased emission quantum yields, similar to 55 nm blue-shift of the emission maximum to 625 nm, and disappearance of the absorption band at 330 nm, the latter arising from the olefinic bond of the L ligand. No spectral changes are observed in solutions at pH <= 4. With the help of chromatography, mass spectroscopy, Raman spectroscopy, and NMR, photoproducts formed at neutral pH have been analyzed. It is found that the major product is a dimer of [(bpy)(2)Ru(II)L], dimerizing around the double bond. Photoreactions do not occur in the dark or in the aprotic solvent acetonitrile. We propose that a Ru(III) radical intermediate is formed by photoinduced excited-state electron and proton transfer, which initiates the dimerization. The radical intermediate can also undergo photochemical degradative reductions. Below pH 4, the emission quenching is proposed to arise via protonation of the monoprotonated [(bpy)(2)Ru(II)LH] followed by electron transfer to the viologen-type moiety created by protonation. The products of photodegradation at pH > 12 are different from those of pH 7, but the mechanism of the degradation at pH > 12 was not elucidated.