Abstract
Excited state quenching is a key step in photochemical reactions that involve energy or electron transfer. High reaction quantum yields require sufficiently high concentrations of quencher to ensure efficient quenching. Determination of quencher concentrations is typically done through trial and error. Using kinetic modeling, however, a simple relationship was developed that predicts the concentration of quencher necessary to quench 90% of excited states, using only the photosensitizer lifetime and the rate constant for quenching as inputs. Comparison of predicted quencher concentrations and quencher concentrations used in photoredox reactions featuring acridinium-based photocatalysts reveals that the majority of reactions used quencher concentrations significantly below the predicted concentration. This suggests these reactions exhibit low quantum yields, requiring long reaction times and/or intense light sources.
Supplementary materials
Title
Supplementary Information
Description
Description of kinetic modeling procedure; impact of illumination intensity and simulation time on quantum yield; percent difference between modeled and predicted quantum yield; details for data in Figures 2 and 3
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