- Bimolecular hole transfer from the trimethoxybenzene radical cation in the excited state.
Bimolecular hole transfer from the trimethoxybenzene radical cation in the excited state.
Bimolecular hole transfer quenching of the 1,3,5-trimethoxybenzene radical cation (TMB*+) in the excited state (TMB*+*) by hole quenchers (Q) such as biphenyl (Bp), naphthalene (Np), anisole (An), and benzene (Bz) with higher oxidation potentials than that of TMB was directly observed during the two-color two-laser flash photolysis at room temperature. From the linear relationships between the inverse of the transient absorption changes of TMB*+ during the second 532-nm laser excitation versus the inverse of the concentration of Q, the rate constant of the hole transfer from TMB*+* to Q was estimated to be (8.5 +/- 0.4) x 10(10), (1.4 +/- 0.7) x 10(11), (1.3 +/- 0.6) x 10(11), and (6.4 +/- 0.3) x 10(10) M(-1)s(-1) for Bp, An, Np, and Bz, respectively, in acetonitrile based on the lifetime of TMB*+*. The estimated rate constants are larger than the diffusion-controlled rate constant in acetonitrile. Short lifetime, high energy, and high oxidation potential of TMB*+* cause the lifetime-dependent quenching process or static quenching process as the major process during the quenching of TMB*+* by Q as indicated by the Ware's theoretical model. The subsequent hole transfer from Q*+ to TMB, giving TMB*+, was found to occur at the diffusion-controlled rate for Bp and An as Q. For Q such as Np and Bz, the dimerization of Q*+ with Q to give dimer radical cation (Q2*+) occurred competitively with the hole transfer from Q*+ to TMB.