Adiabatic electron-transfer is a type of oxidation-reduction processes. The mechanism is ubiquitous in nature in both the inorganic and biological spheres. Adiabatic electron-transfers proceed without making or breaking chemical bonds. Adiabatic electron-transfer can occur by either optical or thermal mechanisms.[1] [2] Electron transfer during a collision between an oxidant and a reductant occurs adiabatically on a continuous potential-energy surface.

History

Noel Hush is often credited with formulation of the theory of adiabatic electron-transfer.[3][4]

Fig. 1. Electron transfer occurs between donor (D) and acceptor (A) species separated by distance R that may be found in many forms in both condensed phases and the gas phase. Internal structure, external structure, or chance collisions provide interconnection between the species. Upon electron transfer, the structure of the local chemical environments involving D and A change, as does the polarization these species induce on any surrounding media.

Figure 1 sketches the basic elements of adiabatic electron-transfer theory. Two chemical species (ions, molecules, polymers, protein cofactors, etc.) labelled D (for “donor”) and A (for “acceptor”) become a distance R apart, either through collisions, covalent bonding, location in a material, protein or polymer structure, etc. A and D have different chemical environments. Each polarizes their surrounding condensed media. Electron-transfer theories describe the influence of a variety of parameters on the rate of electron-transfer. All electrochemical reactions occur by this mechanism. Adiabatic electron-transfer theory stresses that intricately coupled to such charge transfer is the ability of any D-A system to absorb or emit light. Hence fundamental understanding of any electrochemical process demands simultaneous understanding of the optical processes that the system can undergo.

Fig. 2. When the donor species absorbs light energy, it goes into a high-energy excited state, generating significant changes to its local chemical environment and the polarization of its external environment. These environments facilitate coupling between the donor and acceptor, which drives photochemical charge separation with a rate given by Eqn. (3) in the weak-coupling limit. This rate is also dependent on the energy required to rearrange the atoms to the preferred local geometry and environment polarization of the charge-separated state D+-A and the energy change associated with charge separation.

Figure 2 sketches what happens if light is absorbed by just one of the chemical species, taken to be the charge donor. This produces an excited state of the donor. As the donor and acceptor are close to each other and surrounding matter, they experience a coupling . If the free energy change is favorable, this coupling facilitates primary charge separation to produce D+-A , producing charged species. In this way, solar energy is captured and converted to electrical energy. This process is typical of natural photosynthesis as well as modern organic photovoltaic and artificial photosynthesis solar-energy capture devices.[5] The inverse of this process is also used to make organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs).

Fig. 3. Light energy is absorbed by the donor and acceptor, initiating intervalence charge transfer to directly convert solar energy into electrical energy as D+-A. In the weak-coupling limit, the coupling , reorganization energy , and the free energy change control the rate of light absorption (and hence charge separation) via Eqn. (1).

Adiabatic electron-transfer is also relevant to the area of solar energy harvesting. Here, light absorption directly leads to charge separation D+-A. Hush's theory for this process[2] considers the donor-acceptor coupling , the energy required to rearrange the atoms from their initial geometry to the preferred local geometry and environment polarization of the charge-separated state, and the energy change associated with charge separation. In the weak-coupling limit ( ), Hush showed[2] that the rate of light absorption (and hence charge separation) is given from the Einstein equation by

… (1)

This theory explained[2] how Prussian blue absorbes light, creating[6] [7][8] [9][10] the field of intervalence charge transfer spectroscopy.

Adiabatic electron transfer is also relevant to the Robin-Day classification system, which codifies types of mixed valence compounds.[11][12] An iconic system for understanding Inner sphere electron transfer is the mixed-valence Creutz-Taube ion, wherein otherwise equivalent Ru(III) and Ru(II) are linked by a pyrazine. The coupling is not small: charge is not localized on just one chemical species but is shared quantum mechanically between two Ru centers, presenting classically forbidden half-integral valence states.[13] that the critical requirement for this phenomenon is

… (2)

Adiabatic electron-transfer theory stems from London's approach to charge-transfer and indeed general chemical reactions[14] applied by Hush using parabolic potential-energy surfaces.[15][16] Hush himself has carried out many theoretical and experimental studies of mixed valence complexes and long range electron transfer in biological systems. Hush's quantum-electronic adiabatic approach to electron transfer was unique; directly connecting with the Quantum Chemistry concepts of Mulliken, it forms the basis of all modern computational approaches to modeling electron transfer.[17][18][19][20] Its essential feature is that electron transfer can never be regarded as an “instantaneous transition”; instead, the electron is partially transferred at all molecular geometries, with the extent of the transfer being a critical quantum descriptor of all thermal, tunneling, and spectroscopic processes. It also leads seamlessly[21] to understanding electron-transfer transition-state spectroscopy pioneered by Zewail.

In adiabatic electron-transfer theory, the ratio is of central importance. In the very strong coupling limit when Eqn. (2) is satisfied, intrinsically quantum molecules like the Crautz-Taube ion result. Most intervalence spectroscopy occurs in the weak-coupling limit described by Eqn. (1), however. In both natural photosynthesis and in artificial solar-energy capture devices, is maximized by minimizing through use of large molecules like chlorophylls, pentacenes, and conjugated polymers. The coupling can be controlled by controlling the distance R at which charge transfer occurs- the coupling typically decreases exponentially with distance. When electron transfer occurs during collisions of the D and A species, the coupling is typically large and the “adiabatic” limit applies in which rate constants are given by transition state theory.[4] In biological applications, however, as well as some organic conductors and other device materials, R is externally constrained and so the coupling set at low or high values. In these situations, weak-coupling scenarios often become critical.

In the weak-coupling (“non-adiabatic”) limit, the activation energy for electron transfer is given by the expression derived independently by Kubo and Toyozawa[22] and by Hush.[16] Using adiabatic electron-transfer theory,[23] in this limit Levich and Dogonadze then determined the electron-tunneling probability to express the rate constant for thermal reactions as[24]

. … (3)

This approach is widely applicable to long-range ground-state intramolecular electron transfer, electron transfer in biology, and electron transfer in conducting materials. It also typically controls the rate of charge separation in the excited-state photochemical application described in Figure 2 and related problems.

Marcus showed that the activation energy in Eqn. (3) reduces to in the case of symmetric reactions with . In that work,[25] he also derived the standard expression for the solvent contribution to the reorganization energy, making the theory more applicable to practical problems. Use of this solvation description (instead[4] of the form that Hush originally proposed[16]) in approaches spanning the adiabatic and non-adiabatic limits is often termed “Marcus-Hush Theory”.[18][19][26][27] These and other contributions, including the widespread demonstration of the usefulness of Eqn. (3),[28] led to the award of the 1992 Nobel Prize in Chemistry to Marcus.

Adiabatic electron-transfer theory is also widely applied in Molecular Electronics.[29] In particular, this reconnects adiabatic electron-transfer theory with its roots in proton-transfer theory[30] and hydrogen-atom transfer,[15] leading back to London's theory of general chemical reactions.[14]

References

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