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Comparison of Electrochemically and Photochemically Induced Electron‐Transfer Processes of a Series of Copper(II) Schiff Base Complexes with Thiolate Coordination
Author(s) -
Knoblauch Stephan,
Hartl František,
Stufkens Derk J.,
Hennig Horst
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
european journal of inorganic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.667
H-Index - 136
eISSN - 1099-0682
pISSN - 1434-1948
DOI - 10.1002/(sici)1099-0682(19990202)1999:2<303::aid-ejic303>3.0.co;2-2
Subject(s) - chemistry , copper , photochemistry , redox , electrochemistry , schiff base , delocalized electron , moiety , imine , electron transfer , crystallography , inorganic chemistry , stereochemistry , organic chemistry , electrode , catalysis
The electrochemical and photoredox properties of copper(II) thiopyrazolone Schiff base complexes 1 – 9 with imine and thiolate coordination, showing variable degrees of tetrahedral distortion, were investigated by means of combined electrochemical and spectroscopic techniques in the temperature range of 193–293 K. The cyclic voltammograms of 1 – 9 in butyronitrile revealed that the reduction and oxidation paths are strongly dependent on the geometry of the CuN 2 S 2 moiety. Due to the strong delocalization of the singly occupied redox orbital (SOMO) the oxidations and reductions occur in a narrow potential range. The one‐electron‐reduced 1(r) – 9(r) and oxidized 1(o) – 9(o) products were electrogenerated and stabilized inside optically transparent thin‐layer electrochemical (OTTLE) cells at variable temperatures and could be characterized for the first time by UV/Vis spectroscopy. The reduced formal d 10 copper(I) species absorb only weakly in the visible region. The oxidized products 1(o) – 9(o) show several strong absorptions in the visible region due to the presence of formal d 8 copper(III) species. The spectral information allowed assignment of the initial photoproducts. Irradiations in donor media such as THF or EtOH initially produces 1(r) – 9(r) . No photoreduction was observed in t BuOH which cannot liberate reducing H α . The primary oxidized species 1(o) – 9(o) were formed in chlorinated acceptor solvents (CHCl 3 ) on UV irradation. Fast relaxation to the ground state prevents the photoredox reactions from CT or LF excited states.

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