Nonlinear Optical Properties of Porphyrin, Fullerene and Ferrocene Hybrid Materials

In this research, we investigated the second-order nonlinear optical (NLO) properties of multicomponent hybrid materials formed by meso-tetraphenylporphyrin P (both as free base and ZnII complex), carrying in 2 or 2,12 β-pyrrolic position an electron donor ferrocene (Fc), and/or an electron acceptor fullerene (C60) moiety, connected to the porphyrin core via an ethynyl or an ethynylphenyl spacer. We measured the NLO response by the electric-field-induced second-harmonic generation (EFISH) technique in CH2Cl2 solution with a 1907 nm incident wavelength, recording for all the investigated compounds unexpected negative values of μβ1907. Since density functional theory (DFT) calculations evidenced for P-Fc dyads almost null ground state dipole moments and very low values for P-C60 dyads and Fc-P-C60 triads, our EFISH results suggested a significant contribution to γEFISH of the purely electronic cubic term γ(−2ω; ω, ω, 0), which prevails on the quadratic dipolar orientational one μβ(−2ω; ω, ω)/5kT, as confirmed by computational evidence.


Introduction
In the last two decades, many organic and organometallic molecular chromophores have attracted attention in the scientific community for their significant second-order NLO properties, mainly arising from push-pull structures as donor-π-delocalized spaceracceptor systems [1,2]. Among them, porphyrins and metalloporphyrins are very appealing, thanks to their thermal and chemical stability and the quite good solubility [3]. The electron-rich extended 18-electron π-conjugated core of porphyrins (P) can act as a spacer between the donor and the acceptor group in the push-pull system [4][5][6][7], or it can itself be the donor or the acceptor part of the push-pull architecture [8][9][10].
The four meso, the eight β-pyrrolic, and the two axial positions allow a wide variety of chemical functionalizations, so that many different substituents can be linked to the core and to the metal center. Moreover, by changing the metal center, its oxidation state, the type of the axial ligands, the nature of the substituents at the periphery of the macrocycle, the flexibility of the synthetic process and of structural diversification can be exploited to achieve a fine-tuning of the electronic properties and a large second-order NLO response [3].
Through the electric-field-induced second-harmonic generation (EFISH) technique [11,12], the effect of the metal [13], of the nature and of the position of the substituents [8,9,14], and of the presence of aggregation phenomena in solution [15,16] have been investigated in depth. Recently, also the non-negligible role of third-order contributions to the quadratic hyperpolarizability of A 4 β-substituted Zn II porphyrins was highlighted [17].
Since the linkage of electron donor Fc and/or electron acceptor C60 to P turns out in Fc-P and C60-P dyads and Fc-P-C60 triads to have a push-pull structure, they might display interesting second-order NLO properties.
Therefore, this work aims to report and discuss the results of an EFISH investigation of the dyads and triads reported in Figure 1, which have never been investigated from a nonlinear optical point of view.
Electronic absorption spectra of compounds 6-C60 and 6(Zn)-C60 in CH2Cl2 solution were recorded at room temperature on a Shimadzu UV 3600 spectrophotometer (Shimadzu Corporation, Kyoto, Japan) and are reported in the Supplementary Materials (Figures S7 and S8).

EFISH Measurements
EFISH experiments were performed on freshly prepared 10 −3 M CH2Cl2 solutions. The incident wavelength at 1.907 µ m was obtained by Raman shifting the 1.064 µ m emission of a Q-switched Nd:YAG laser in a high-pressure hydrogen cell (60 bar). The 1.907 μm laser incident wavelength was chosen because its second harmonic (at 953 nm) was far enough from the absorption bands of the chromophores in CH2Cl2 [46] to avoid any enhancement of the second-order NLO response because of resonance. The Maker fringe pattern (that is the harmonic intensity variation as a function of the cell translation) was obtained through a liquid cell with thick windows in the wedge configuration. In the EFISH experiments, the incident beam was synchronized with a DC field applied to the solution, with 60 and 20 ns pulse durations, respectively, to break its centrosymmetry. The NLO response (assumed to be real because the imaginary part was neglected) was
Electronic absorption spectra of compounds 6-C60 and 6(Zn)-C60 in CH 2 Cl 2 solution were recorded at room temperature on a Shimadzu UV 3600 spectrophotometer (Shimadzu Corporation, Kyoto, Japan) and are reported in the Supplementary Materials ( Figures S7 and S8).

EFISH Measurements
EFISH experiments were performed on freshly prepared 10 −3 M CH 2 Cl 2 solutions. The incident wavelength at 1.907 µm was obtained by Raman shifting the 1.064 µm emission of a Q-switched Nd:YAG laser in a high-pressure hydrogen cell (60 bar). The 1.907 µm laser incident wavelength was chosen because its second harmonic (at 953 nm) was far enough from the absorption bands of the chromophores in CH 2 Cl 2 [46] to avoid any enhancement of the second-order NLO response because of resonance. The Maker fringe pattern (that is the harmonic intensity variation as a function of the cell translation) was obtained through a liquid cell with thick windows in the wedge configuration. In the EFISH experiments, the incident beam was synchronized with a DC field applied to the solution, with 60 and 20 ns pulse durations, respectively, to break its centrosymmetry. The NLO response (assumed to be real because the imaginary part was neglected) was determined from the concentration dependence of the harmonic signal with respect to that of the pure solvent through the experimental value γ EFISH Equation (1): γ EFISH is the sum of the purely electronic cubic contribution γ(−2ω; ω, ω, 0) and of a quadratic dipolar orientational contribution µβ λ (−2ω; ω, ω)/5kT, µ being the ground state dipole moment, and β λ the projection along the dipole moment direction of the vectorial component β vec of the tensorial quadratic hyperpolarizability working with the incident wavelength λ.
The EFISH experiments were performed recording firstly the second-order response of the pure solvent, then the second-order response of the chromophore in solution, and finally the second-order response of the solvent again. The EFISH values reported were the average of 12 consecutive measurements performed on the same sample. The uncertainty of the measure was about ±15%.
All the experimental EFISH β 1.907 values were defined according to the "phenomenological" convention [54].
The apparatus for the EFISH measurements was a prototype made by SOPRA (Paris, France) and the experiments were carried out in the Department of Chemistry of the University of Milano (Italy).

Synthesis
The dyads and triads investigated in this work have never been considered for nonlinear optics. They have been synthesized and characterized according to the literature, as highlighted in Section 2.1 [36,46,53].
However, since their preparation was not trivial, we summarized the main synthetic details (Scheme 1).
The possibility of placing different substituents at the β-pyrrole positions constituted a powerful approach toward the fine-tuning of tetrapyrroles and the modulation of electron donor-acceptor interactions to realize performing hybrid materials.
In Scheme 1 we show three different synthetic strategies for creating push-pull systems formed by a combination of electron donors (i.e., ferrocene), light harvester (i.e., porphyrin), and electron acceptors (i.e., C60) connected to each other through "molecular wires" of variable lengths.

UV-Vis Spectroscopy
The electronic properties of the dyads and triads were investigated by UV-Vis spectroscopy in CH2Cl2 solution (Table 1). While the spectra of 6-C60 and 6(Zn)-C60 were recorded for the first time ( Figures S7 and S8 in the Supplementary Materials), those of the other compounds have already been reported [46,53,37]. Specifically, ethynyl or ethynylphenyl functionalities were selected as molecular bridges because of their synthetic versatility and their outstanding physicochemical properties. It was previously reported that these linkers assist in a good conduction of the charges due to their high electron density and the extended π-system [63][64][65].
The use of synthetic approaches that involved the Sonogashira reaction or its modification for the formation of carbon-carbon bonds allowed obtaining final mono and disubstituted compounds in β-positions of the macrocycle.
The first step involved the bromination of compound 1 using different quantities of Nbromosuccinimide (NBS) to obtain preferentially monobromo-(2) and dibromo-porphyrin (7). The bromination of specific antipodal pyrrole position 2 and 2,12 was carried out following the procedure from the literature [66], using light-induced reaction and NBS in CH 2 Cl 2 . The first synthetic strategy (Strategy 1) consisted of a variation of Sonogashira coupling introduced by Li and coworkers [67] for the formation of monosubstituted compounds by linking different donor units.
Specifically, we used ferrocenyl moieties of variable length such as ethynylferrocene (a) or 4-(ferrocenyl)-phenylacetylene (b) to functionalize the β positions of the macrocycle in one step.
The approach was based on the use of tetrabutylammonium fluoride (TBAF) as reagent under copper-, amine-, and solvent-free conditions. We obtained the final compounds 3a and 3b in 50-65% of yield [53], starting from compound 2 and using Pd(PPh 3 ) 2 Cl 2 as catalyst.
The second strategy (Strategy 2) involved a Sonogashira coupling, using the catalytic system Pd 2 (dba) 3 /AsPh 3 developed by Lindsey and coworkers [68][69][70], paying particular attention to the deoxygenation and dilution conditions and, most of all, avoiding the use of copper iodide as cocatalyst.
In this way the homocoupling side reaction between terminal alkynes was suppressed, and the desired final hybrid materials were formed by the combination of porphyrin and fullerene as acceptor unit.
In this synthetic strategy the Sonogashira coupling of compound 2 with 1.5 equivalents of p-ethynylbenzaldehyde (4) afforded porphyrin 5. For the functionalization of C60 with intermediate 5, we used the Prato-Maggini reaction [71] to achieve the final compound 6-C60 in 60% of yield [36].
To obtain disubstituted hybrid materials formed in the same structure by an acceptor and donor units, the third synthetic strategy was adopted (Strategy 3).
In addition, in this case the first step involved a Sonogashira coupling of compound 7 with 1.5 equivalents of compound 4 to obtain compound 8.
The next step was again a Sonogashira coupling reaction between compound 8 and two equivalents of different ferrocene units (a-b) to afford the corresponding intermediates 9a and 9b.
The complexation to the metal ion induced a 3-15 nm ba band. A 2 nm redshift by complexation occurred also for the QI C60. On the other hand, by complexation to Zn II of triads 10a band underwent a 4-6 nm ipsochromic shift and increased in in The UV-Vis data allowed us to highlight the effect that the C60 may have had on the electronic properties of P (and of its Z Starting from 5, 10, 15, 20-tetraphenylporphyrin 1 (Scheme pyrrolic position of an electron-donating Fc moiety connected t (3a) produced a sizable redshift of the B and the Q bands (9 an suggesting an increased molecular conjugation. Conversely, th additional phenyl unit between Fc and P (3b) slightly affected ties: the B and QIV bands were almost the same, while the other t

(5.78)
The UV-Vis spectra of the free-base porphyrin and of their Zn II complexes (3a(Zn), 3b(Zn), 6(Zn fulfilled the "four orbital model" developed by Go ond excited state) transition produced the intense band at 420-450 nm, and the S0 ➔ S1 (ground➔f (for free bases) or two (for the Zn II complexes) w bands at 520-670 nm. The reduction of the numbe because of the increased degree of microsymmetry metal complex [72].
The complexation to the metal ion induced band. A 2 nm redshift by complexation occurred a C60. On the other hand, by complexation to Zn II band underwent a 4-6 nm ipsochromic shift and i The UV-Vis data allowed us to highlight the e C60 may have had on the electronic properties of P Starting from 5, 10, 15, 20-tetraphenylporphy pyrrolic position of an electron-donating Fc moiety (3a) produced a sizable redshift of the B and the Q suggesting an increased molecular conjugation. C additional phenyl unit between Fc and P (3b) slig ties: the B and QIV bands were almost the same, wh  The UV-Vis spectra of the free-base porphyrins (3a, 3b, 6-C60, 10a-C60 and 10b-C60) and of their Zn II complexes (3a(Zn), 3b(Zn), 6(Zn)-C60, 10a(Zn)-C60 and 10b(Zn)-C60) fulfilled the "four orbital model" developed by Gouterman [72]. The S0➔S2 (ground➔second excited state) transition produced the intense (logε in the range 4.50-5.43) Soret or B band at 420-450 nm, and the S0 ➔ S1 (ground➔first excited state) transitions led to four (for free bases) or two (for the Zn II complexes) weaker (logε in the range 3.42-4.50) Q bands at 520-670 nm. The reduction of the number of the Q bands by complexation was because of the increased degree of microsymmetry, from D2h of the free base to D4h of the metal complex [72].
The complexation to the metal ion induced a 3-15 nm bathochromic shift of the B band. A 2 nm redshift by complexation occurred also for the QIII band of dyads 3b and 6-C60. On the other hand, by complexation to Zn II of triads 10a-C60 and 10b-C60 the QIII band underwent a 4-6 nm ipsochromic shift and increased in intensity.
The UV-Vis data allowed us to highlight the effect that the introduction of Fc and/or C60 may have had on the electronic properties of P (and of its Zn II complex) [73]. Starting from 5, 10, 15, 20-tetraphenylporphyrin 1 (Scheme 1), the introduction in βpyrrolic position of an electron-donating Fc moiety connected to the core by a triple bond (3a) produced a sizable redshift of the B and the Q bands (9 and 11-18 nm, respectively), suggesting an increased molecular conjugation. Conversely, the introduction in 3a of an additional phenyl unit between Fc and P (3b) slightly affected the spectroscopic properties: the B and QIV bands were almost the same, while the other three Q bands experienced
The complexation to the metal ion induced a 3-15 nm bathochromic shift of the B band. A 2 nm redshift by complexation occurred also for the QIII band of dyads 3b and 6-C60. On the other hand, by complexation to Zn II of triads 10a-C60 and 10b-C60 the QIII band underwent a 4-6 nm ipsochromic shift and increased in intensity.
The UV-Vis data allowed us to highlight the effect that the introduction of Fc and/or C60 may have had on the electronic properties of P (and of its Zn II complex) [73]. Starting from 5, 10, 15, 20-tetraphenylporphyrin 1 (Scheme 1), the introduction in βpyrrolic position of an electron-donating Fc moiety connected to the core by a triple bond (3a) produced a sizable redshift of the B and the Q bands (9 and 11-18 nm, respectively), suggesting an increased molecular conjugation. Conversely, the introduction in 3a of an additional phenyl unit between Fc and P (3b) slightly affected the spectroscopic properties: the B and QIV bands were almost the same, while the other three Q bands experienced first excited state) transitions led to four (for free bases) or two (for the Zn II complexes) weaker (logε in the range 3.42-4.50) Q bands at 520-670 nm. The reduction of the number of the Q bands by complexation was because of the increased degree of microsymmetry, from D 2h of the free base to D 4h of the metal complex [72].
The complexation to the metal ion induced a 3-15 nm bathochromic shift of the B band. A 2 nm redshift by complexation occurred also for the Q III band of dyads 3b and 6-C60. On the other hand, by complexation to Zn II of triads 10a-C60 and 10b-C60 the Q III band underwent a 4-6 nm ipsochromic shift and increased in intensity.
The UV-Vis data allowed us to highlight the effect that the introduction of Fc and/or C60 may have had on the electronic properties of P (and of its Zn II complex) [73].
Starting from 5, 10, 15, 20-tetraphenylporphyrin 1 (Scheme 1), the introduction in β-pyrrolic position of an electron-donating Fc moiety connected to the core by a triple bond (3a) produced a sizable redshift of the B and the Q bands (9 and 11-18 nm, respectively), suggesting an increased molecular conjugation. Conversely, the introduction in 3a of an additional phenyl unit between Fc and P (3b) slightly affected the spectroscopic properties: the B and Q IV bands were almost the same, while the other three Q bands experienced a slight ipsochromic shift (1-3 nm). Hence, the insertion of the phenyl moiety was not effective in further enhancing π-delocalization. Furthermore, linking an electron-withdrawing C60 moiety to 1 by an ethynylphenyl spacer (6-C60) led to a significant redshift of the B and Q bands (10 and 7-11 nm, respectively) and to an increased conjugation. However, different from what was observed when a -NO 2 [17] or a cyanoacrylic moiety [24,65,74] was connected in the same fashion to a Zn II -porphyrin, the B band of 6(Zn)-C60 was symmetric, without any shoulder at lower energy.
In the spectra of 6-C60 and 6(Zn)-C60 the well-defined contribution of the C60 unit was also present at 255 and 329 nm, respectively [75].
Therefore, the insertion of a Fc or a C60 moiety on P affects and tunes its electronic properties, promoting a charge transfer process from the π-conjugated substituent in βpyrrolic position to the macrocycle when the former carries an electron donor, and from the macrocycle to the π-conjugated system when this latter has an electron acceptor [17]. In other words, P behaves as an electron acceptor moiety when connected to electronrich Fc and as an electron donor when connected to electron acceptor C60, displaying an ambivalent role [8,10].
When both Fc and C60 were bound to P in 2,12 β-pyrrolic positions [76] (triads 10a-C60 and 10b-C60 and their Zn II complexes), the UV-Vis data showed a further redshift of the B and Q bands, which was more significant for the first triad.

EFISH Investigation of the Second-Order NLO Properties
We measured the second-order NLO response of our compounds by the EFISH technique on 10 −3 M CH 2 Cl 2 solutions with a 1907 nm incident wavelength. The details are in the Materials and Methods Sections, and the results in Table 2. All the investigated compounds showed negative γ EFISH and µβ 1907 values. For dyads 6-C60 and 6(Zn)-C60 and for triads 10a(Zn)-C60 and 10b(Zn)-C60 this outcome was quite unexpected. Indeed, the similar complexes BP1 and BP3 (Figure 2), with a -NO 2 acceptor group (instead of C60) and a -NMe 2 donor group (instead of Fc) linked to the core by an ethynylphenyl moiety in 2 and 2,12 β-pyrrolic position, displayed positive γ EFISH and µβ 1907 values [17].
According to the "two-level" model developed by Oudar [77,78], a negative sign of µβ λ derives from a negative value of ∆µ eg , which is the difference between the excited and the ground state molecular dipole moments. Negative µβ λ values suggest a decrease of the excited state dipole moment in comparison to the ground state [79]. This evidence occurred for C60 containing second-order NLO chromophores, in which the C60 acceptor moiety endows a cyclopropane ring bridging an ethynylthienyl spacer linked to a trimethylsilyl or an alkynyl platinum donor unit [80]. According to the "two-level" model developed by Oudar [77,78], a negative sign of μβλ derives from a negative value of Δμeg, which is the difference between the excited and the ground state molecular dipole moments. Negative μβλ values suggest a decrease of the excited state dipole moment in comparison to the ground state [79]. This evidence occurred for C60 containing second-order NLO chromophores, in which the C60 acceptor moiety endows a cyclopropane ring bridging an ethynylthienyl spacer linked to a trimethylsilyl or an alkynyl platinum donor unit [80]. Moreover, when the second-order NLO response obtained by the EFISH technique showed an unexpected sign and/or absolute value of βλ, aggregation or other molecular interactions occurring in solution should be considered [15,16].
Nevertheless, A4 β-pyrrolic mono or disubstituted Zn II porphyrins were characterized by a remarkable steric hindrance, because of the 70-90° dihedral angle formed by the aryl rings in 5, 10, 15, 20 meso position with the mean plane of the macrocycle, which lowered the flatness of the molecule and hampered aggregation phenomena in solution [16,76].
The μβ1907 values in Table 2 derive from Equation (1), neglecting the cubic electronic contribution γ0(−2ω; ω, ω, 0) to γEFISH, and for this reason could be overestimated. Indeed, the EFISH technique is appropriate to study dipolar chromophores with a clear push-pull structure, for which the third-order contribution is much smaller than the quadratic dipolar orientational term and can be neglected. However, for macrocycles with an extended π-conjugation and significant third-order NLO properties (asymmetrically monosubstituted metal porphyrins [81], phtalocyanines [82] or porphyrazines [83]), the EFISH second-order NLO response could be affected by a significant error, since the cubic term is comparable, at least as an order of magnitude, to the quadratic orientational one. Moreover, as recently reported by some of us for the BP2 complex ( Figure 2) [17], when the molecular ground state dipole moment (μ) is low, the electronic third-order term can have an overwhelming role, determining the sign of the second-order response. Moreover, when the second-order NLO response obtained by the EFISH technique showed an unexpected sign and/or absolute value of β λ , aggregation or other molecular interactions occurring in solution should be considered [15,16].
Nevertheless, A 4 β-pyrrolic mono or disubstituted Zn II porphyrins were characterized by a remarkable steric hindrance, because of the 70-90 • dihedral angle formed by the aryl rings in 5, 10, 15, 20 meso position with the mean plane of the macrocycle, which lowered the flatness of the molecule and hampered aggregation phenomena in solution [16,76].
The µβ 1907 values in Table 2 derive from Equation (1), neglecting the cubic electronic contribution γ 0 (−2ω; ω, ω, 0) to γ EFISH, and for this reason could be overestimated. Indeed, the EFISH technique is appropriate to study dipolar chromophores with a clear push-pull structure, for which the third-order contribution is much smaller than the quadratic dipolar orientational term and can be neglected. However, for macrocycles with an extended πconjugation and significant third-order NLO properties (asymmetrically monosubstituted metal porphyrins [81], phtalocyanines [82] or porphyrazines [83]), the EFISH second-order NLO response could be affected by a significant error, since the cubic term is comparable, at least as an order of magnitude, to the quadratic orientational one. Moreover, as recently reported by some of us for the BP2 complex ( Figure 2) [17], when the molecular ground state dipole moment (µ) is low, the electronic third-order term can have an overwhelming role, determining the sign of the second-order response.
To clarify these aspects, we computed the ground state dipole moments of our dyads and triads by DFT ( Table 2).
The µ values for all the P-Fc dyads (3a, 3a(Zn), 3b and 3b(Zn)) were almost null, suggesting for these compounds a very low dipolar character. Notably, 3a(Zn) and 3b(Zn) showed the lowest µ ever computed for A 4 β-pyrrolic monosubstituted Zn II porphyrins [8,17], with values comparable in the order of magnitude only to the ones reported for symmetric structures such as BP4 and BP5 ( Figure 2). Therefore, endowing the porphyrin core either as a free core or as a Zn II complex with a donor Fc moiety did not produce an efficient push-pull system, despite the increased molecular conjugation pointed out by the UV-Vis spectroscopic data (Table 1). In other words, the electronic perturbation induced by Fc in the β-pyrrolic position of the macrocycle was trivial. The overall polarizability of the system increased, but without any sizable asymmetry in the electronic density distribution.
Hence, we can safely conclude that, similar to what was reported for slightly asymmetric BP2 and for symmetric BP4 and BP5 [17], in P-Fc dyads the electronic third-order contribution γ 0 (−2ω; ω, ω, 0) to γ EFISH outstrips the dipolar orientational term µβ 1907 (−2ω; ω, ω)/5kT. Basically P-Fc dyads behave as third-order NLO chromophores, because of their almost null polarity. This conclusion is supported by CP-DFT calculations in dichloromethane, which we chose to perform only on the Zn II dyads and triads similar to BP1, BP2 and BP3, as the most representative of our series (Table 3). As expected, 3b(Zn) showed a very low β || value as a consequence of a negligible µβ || /5kT in comparison to the high and negative γ || (Table 3).
In contrast, linking a C60 moiety to P produced dyads (6-C60 and 6(Zn)-C60) with µ values in the range 3.5-4.8 D, in agreement with a decrease of the electron density on P when connected to acceptor C60 and playing the role of the electron donor part of the pushpull system [8]. The acceptor character of C60 appeared lower than that of the -NO 2 group, since for BP1 a µ value of 7.8 D was computed (compared with 4.77 of 6(Zn)-C60) [17]. Moreover, an enhancement of µ occurred by complexation (the µ of 6-C60 was 4.21 D and that of 6(Zn)-C60 4.77 D) [8].
Nevertheless, P-C60 dyads, albeit more polar than the P-Fc counterparts, still showed a low molecular asymmetry. In agreement with the enhanced µ value and the more pronounced push-pull character, the computed β || and µβ || /5kT of 6(Zn)-C60 were higher than those of 3b(Zn), but the γ EFISH was still dominated by the third-order contribution, which produced a negative sign.
Eventually, the µ values of the triads were similar one to the other and to those of P-C60 dyads, confirming the insignificant contribution of the Fc unit to the polarity of the system, even in the presence of the additional phenyl spacer between Fc and P. An increase of µ occurred by complexation (3.82 D vs. 4.37 D for 10a-C60 and 10a(Zn)-C60 and 3.82 D vs. 4.14 D for 10b-C60 and 10b(Zn)-C60). Once again, the computed β || , µβ || /5kT and γ || values supported an overwhelming contribution of the cubic term to γ EFISH . Moreover, the absolute value of γ || of 10b(Zn)-C60 was the highest among the series (Table 3), since the introduction of the ethynylphenyl spacer carrying the Fc moiety extended π-delocalization, as evidenced by the bathochromic shift of the B and Q bands in the UV-Vis spectra (Table 1).

Conclusions
In this work, we investigated the second-order NLO properties of a series of dyads and triads composed by meso-tetraphenylporphyrin P (both as free base and Zn II complex), carrying in 2 or 2,12 β-pyrrolic position an electron donor ferrocene (Fc), and/or an electron acceptor fullerene (C60) moiety, connected to the porphyrinic core via an ethynyl or an ethynylphenyl spacer.
UV-Vis spectroscopy showed that the introduction of a Fc or a C60 unit on the P core causes a sizable bathochromic shift of the B and Q bands of the tetrapyrrolic macrocycle, pointing to an increased molecular conjugation, in particular, with an ethynyl spacer.
Indeed, the insertion of an additional phenyl moiety between Fc and P did not enhance π-delocalization significantly. On the other hand, linking both Fc and C60 to P produced a further redshift of the electronic absorption bands.
Therefore, the presence of Fc and /or C60 tuned the electronic properties of P in such a way that it behaved as an electron acceptor when connected to electron-rich Fc and as an electron donor when connected to electron-deficient C60, confirming its ambivalent role [8,10].
Surprisingly, EFISH measurements produced for all the investigated compounds negative γ EFISH and µβ 1907 values. Since A 4 β-pyrrolic mono or disubstituted Zn II porphyrins feature a sterically hindered architecture [16,76], we could safely exclude the presence of aggregation phenomena in solution, which could affect the sign and magnitude of the EFISH response.
DFT-computed dipole moments of P-Fc dyads were almost null, and for P-C60 dyads and Fc-P-C60 triads they were in the range 3.5-4.8 D, suggesting for all the investigated compounds a low polarity, which led to a non-negligible third-order contribution to their second-order NLO response, as confirmed by the calculated β || , µβ || /5kT and γ || values of representative dyads and triads.
Therefore, our investigation proved from both an experimental and a theoretical point of view that the combination of porphyrins, fullerene, and ferrocene leads to hybrid materials with a high polarizability but a low push-pull character, whose second-order NLO properties as measured by the EFISH technique must be analyzed very carefully.