posted on 2001-07-12, 00:00authored byShaun MacMahon, Robert Fong, Phil S. Baran, Igor Safonov, Stephen R. Wilson, David I. Schuster
There is substantial interest in dyads in which C60 is covalently linked to electron donors, such as
porphyrins, which absorb light strongly in the visible region. We present here the details of the
syntheses of such compounds, which can be broadly organized into categories depending upon the
nature of the linker joining the two chromophores. The structural aspects of intramolecular electronic
interaction that we have sought to explore have dictated the synthetic strategies employed to
generate these classes of molecules. Flexible glycol linkers were used to allow close approach between
the fullerene and porphyrin, facilitating through-space interactions. These linkers also allowed
studies of the effects of metal cation complexation. Naphthalene and alkyne linkers were used to
examine the possible effects a conjugated or aromatic linker might have on photophysical properties.
Finally, steroids were used as linkers in dyads expected to possess a large distance between the
two chromophores, in which only through-bond interactions between the fullerene and porphyrin
should be possible.