Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Martin Kuss-Petermann is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Martin Kuss-Petermann.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Influence of Donor-Acceptor Distance Variation on Photoinduced Electron and Proton Transfer in Rhenium(I)-Phenol Dyads

Martin Kuss-Petermann; Hilke Wolf; Dietmar Stalke; Oliver S. Wenger

A homologous series of four molecules in which a phenol unit is linked covalently to a rhenium(I) tricarbonyl diimine photooxidant via a variable number of p-xylene spacers (n = 0-3) was synthesized and investigated. The species with a single p-xylene spacer was structurally characterized to get some benchmark distances. Photoexcitation of the metal complex in the shortest dyad (n = 0) triggers release of the phenolic proton to the acetonitrile/water solvent mixture; a H/D kinetic isotope effect (KIE) of 2.0 ± 0.4 is associated with this process. Thus, the shortest dyad basically acts like a photoacid. The next two longer dyads (n = 1, 2) exhibit intramolecular photoinduced phenol-to-rhenium electron transfer in the rate-determining excited-state deactivation step, and there is no significant KIE in this case. For the dyad with n = 1, transient absorption spectroscopy provided evidence for release of the phenolic proton to the solvent upon oxidation of the phenol by intramolecular photoinduced electron transfer. Subsequent thermal charge recombination is associated with a H/D KIE of 3.6 ± 0.4 and therefore is likely to involve proton motion in the rate-determining reaction step. Thus, some of the longer dyads (n = 1, 2) exhibit photoinduced proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET), albeit in a stepwise (electron transfer followed by proton transfer) rather than concerted manner. Our study demonstrates that electronically strongly coupled donor-acceptor systems may exhibit significantly different photoinduced PCET chemistry than electronically weakly coupled donor-bridge-acceptor molecules.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Increasing Electron-Transfer Rates with Increasing Donor-Acceptor Distance.

Martin Kuss-Petermann; Oliver S. Wenger

Electron transfer can readily occur over long (≥15 Å) distances. Usually reaction rates decrease with increasing distance between donors and acceptors, but theory predicts a regime in which electron-transfer rates increase with increasing donor-acceptor separation. This counter-intuitive behavior can result from the interplay of reorganization energy and electronic coupling, but until now experimental studies have failed to provide unambiguous evidence for this effect. We report here on a homologous series of rigid rodlike donor-bridge-acceptor compounds in which the electron-transfer rate increases by a factor of 8 when the donor-acceptor distance is extended from 22.0 to 30.6 Å, and then it decreases by a factor of 188 when the distance is increased further to 39.2 Å. This effect has important implications for solar energy conversion.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2016

Electron Transfer Rate Maxima at Large Donor–Acceptor Distances

Martin Kuss-Petermann; Oliver S. Wenger

Because of their low mass, electrons can transfer rapidly over long (>15 Å) distances, but usually reaction rates decrease with increasing donor-acceptor distance. We report here on electron transfer rate maxima at donor-acceptor separations of 30.6 Å, observed for thermal electron transfer between an anthraquinone radical anion and a triarylamine radical cation in three homologous series of rigid-rod-like donor-photosensitizer-acceptor triads with p-xylene bridges. Our experimental observations can be explained by a weak distance dependence of electronic donor-acceptor coupling combined with a strong increase of the (outer-sphere) reorganization energy with increasing distance, as predicted by electron transfer theory more than 30 years ago. The observed effect has important consequences for light-to-chemical energy conversion.


Angewandte Chemie | 2016

Light-Driven Electron Accumulation in a Molecular Pentad.

Margherita Orazietti; Martin Kuss-Petermann; Peter Hamm; Oliver S. Wenger

Accumulation and temporary storage of redox equivalents with visible light as an energy input is of pivotal importance for artificial photosynthesis because key reactions, such as CO2 reduction or water oxidation, require the transfer of multiple redox equivalents. We report on the first purely molecular system, in which a long-lived charge-separated state (τ≈870 ns) with two electrons accumulated on a suitable acceptor unit can be observed after excitation with visible light. Importantly, no sacrificial reagents were employed.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2017

Intramolecular Light-Driven Accumulation of Reduction Equivalents by Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer

Martin Kuss-Petermann; Margherita Orazietti; Markus Neuburger; Peter Hamm; Oliver S. Wenger

The photochemistry of a molecular pentad composed of a central anthraquinone (AQ) acceptor flanked by two Ru(bpy)32+ photosensitizers and two peripheral triarylamine (TAA) donors was investigated by transient IR and UV-vis spectroscopies in the presence of 0.2 M p-toluenesulfonic acid (TsOH) in deaerated acetonitrile. In ∼15% of all excited pentad molecules, AQ is converted to its hydroquinone form (AQH2) via reversible intramolecular electron transfer from the two TAA units (τ = 65 ps), followed by intermolecular proton transfer from TsOH (τ ≈ 3 ns for the first step). Although the light-driven accumulation of reduction equivalents occurs through a sequence of electron and proton transfer steps, the resulting photoproduct decays via concerted PCET (τ = 4.7 μs) with an H/D kinetic isotope effect of 1.4 ± 0.2. Moreover, the reoxidation of AQH2 seems to take place via a double electron transfer step involving both TAA+ units rather than sequential single electron transfer events. Thus, the overall charge-recombination reaction seems to involve a concerted proton-coupled two-electron oxidation of AQH2. The comparison of experimental data obtained in neat acetonitrile with data from acidic solutions suggests that the inverted driving-force effect can play a crucial role for obtaining long-lived photoproducts resulting from multiphoton, multielectron processes. Our pentad provides the first example of light-driven accumulation of reduction equivalents stabilized by PCET in artificial molecular systems without sacrificial reagents. Our study provides fundamental insight into how light-driven multielectron redox chemistry, for example the reduction of CO2 or the oxidation of H2O, can potentially be performed without sacrificial reagents.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2017

Directing Energy Transfer in Panchromatic Platinum Complexes for Dual Vis–Near-IR or Dual Visible Emission from σ-Bonded BODIPY Dyes

Fabian Geist; Andrej Jackel; Peter Irmler; Michael Linseis; Sabine Malzkuhn; Martin Kuss-Petermann; Oliver S. Wenger; Rainer F. Winter

We report on the platinum complexes trans-Pt(BODIPY)(8-ethynyl-BODIPY)(PEt3)2 (EtBPtB) and trans-Pt(BODIPY)(4-ethynyl-1,8-naphthalimide)(PR3)2 (R = Et, EtNIPtB-1; R = Ph, EtNIPtB-2), which all contain two different dye ligands that are connected to the platinum atom by a direct σ bond. The molecular structures of all complexes were established by X-ray crystallography and show that the different dye ligands are in either a coplanar or an orthogonal arrangement. π-stacking and several CH···F and short CH···π interactions involving protons at the phosphine substituents lead to interesting packing motifs in the crystal. The complexes feature several strong absorptions (ε = 3.2 × 105-5.5 × 105 M-1 cm-1) that cover the regime from 350 to 480 nm (EtNIPtB-1 and EtNIPtB-2) or from 350 to 580 nm (EtBPtB). Besides the typical absorption bands of both kinds of attached dyes, they also feature an intense band near 400-420 nm, which is assigned by time-dependent density functional theory calculations to a higher-energy transition within the ethynyl-BODIPY (EtB) ligand or to charge transfer between the BODIPY (B) and naphthalimide (NI) chromophores. All complexes show dual fluorescence and phosphorescence emission from either the B (EtNIPtB-1 and EtNIPtB-2) or EtB (EtBPtB) ligand with a maximum phosphorescence quantum yield of 41% for EtNIPtB-1. The latter seems to be the highest reported value for room temperature phosphorescence from a BODIPY dye. The complete quenching of the emission from the chromophore absorbing at the higher energy and the appearance of the corresponding absorption bands in the fluorescence and phosphorescence excitation spectra indicate complete and rapid energy transfer to the chromophore with the lower-energy excited state, i.e., EtNI → B in EtNIPtB-1 and EtNIPtB-2 and B → EtB in EtBPtB. The latter process was further investigated by transient absorption spectroscopy, indicating that energy transfer is complete within 0.6 ns. EtNIPtB-1 catalyzes the photooxidation of 1,5-dihydroxynaphthalene with photogenerated 1O2 to Juglone at a much faster rate than methylene blue but with only modest quantum yields of 37% and with the onset of photodegradation after 60 min.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2017

Exceptionally Long‐Lived Photodriven Multi‐Electron Storage without Sacrificial Reagents

Martin Kuss-Petermann; Oliver S. Wenger

Photoexcitation of a molecular pentad in the presence of Sc3+ in de-aerated CH3 CN leads to a quinone dianion that is stable on the millisecond timescale. Light-driven electron accumulation on the quinone unit is sensitized by two Ru(bpy)32+ complexes in an intramolecular process, which relies on covalently attached triarylamine donors rather than on sacrificial reagents. Lewis acid-Lewis base interactions between Sc3+ and quinone dianion are responsible for the exceptionally long lifetime of this photoproduct. Our study of photoinduced multi-electron transfer is relevant in the greater context of solar energy conversion.


Chimia | 2016

Reaction Rate Maxima at Large Distances between Reactants.

Martin Kuss-Petermann; Oliver S. Wenger

One commonly thinks that two reactants need to come very close to one another in order for a chemical reaction to occur. This is true for most reaction types, but electron transfer is an exception in this regard. It is a well-documented fact that electron transfers can occur over long distances (≥15 Å), but it is much less well-known that theory predicts a regime in which electron transfer rates in crease with increasing distance between reactants. This contribution explains the physical origin of this counter-intuitive behavior, and it identifies a set of conditions that might facilitate its experimental observation.


Inorganic Chemistry | 2018

Influence of Mesoionic Carbenes on Electro- and Photoactive Ru and Os Complexes: A Combined (Spectro-)Electrochemical, Photochemical, and Computational Study

Lisa Suntrup; Felix Stein; Gunter Hermann; Merlin Kleoff; Martin Kuss-Petermann; Johannes E. M. N. Klein; Oliver S. Wenger; Jean Christophe Tremblay; Biprajit Sarkar

In recent years, mesoionic carbenes (MICs) are finding increasing use as building blocks of electro- and photoactive metal complexes. We present here a series of RuII and OsII polypyridine complexes where one or two pyridyl moieties of the well-known tris(bipyridine) analogues are replaced by MICs. We probe the structural, electrochemical, UV-vis-NIR/electron paramagnetic resonance spectroelectrochemical, and photophysical properties of these complexes as a function of the number of MICs in them. Insights from theoretical studies are used to describe the electronic structures of the various redox states. Additionally, electron flux density calculations provide an idea of the flow of electron densities in the excited states of these molecules. This is the first time that such electron flux density calculations are used to probe the excited state properties of transition metal complexes. Our results conclusively prove that the incorporation of MICs into Ru/Os-polypyridyl complexes has a profound influence on the ground and the excited state redox potentials, the position of the emission bands, as well as on the lifetimes of the excited states. These observations might thus be useful for the generation of novel photocatalysts and photosensitizers for dye-sensitized-solar-cells based on MICs.


Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters | 2013

Mechanistic Diversity in Proton-Coupled Electron Transfer between Thiophenols and Photoexcited [Ru(2,2′-Bipyrazine)3]2+

Martin Kuss-Petermann; Oliver S. Wenger

Collaboration


Dive into the Martin Kuss-Petermann's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Biprajit Sarkar

Free University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Dietmar Stalke

University of Göttingen

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Felix Stein

Free University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Gunter Hermann

Free University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Hilke Wolf

University of Göttingen

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge