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1.
Hydrogen bonds from water to excited-state formaldehyde and from water to excited-state pyridine have been shown to display novel motifs to traditional hydrogen bonds involving ground states, with, in particular for H2O:pyridine, strong interactions involving the electron-rich pi cloud dominating the (n,pi) excited state. We investigate H2O:pyrimidine and various dihydrated species and reveal another motif, one in which the hydrogen bonding can dramatically alter the electronic structure of the excited state. Such effects are rare for ground-state interactions for which hydrogen bonding usually acts to merely perturb the electronic structure of the participating molecules. It arises as the (n,pi*) excitation of isolated pyrimidine is delocalized over both nitrogens but asymmetric hydrogen bonding causes it to localize on just the noninteracting atom. As a result, the excited-state hydrogen bond in H2O:pyrimidine is suprisingly very similar to the ground-state structure. These results lead to an improved understanding of the spectroscopy of pyrimidine in liquid water, and to the prediction that stable excited-state hydrogen bonds in H2O:pyrimidine should be observable, despite failure of experiments to actually do so. They also provide a simple model for the intricate control over primary charge separation in photosynthesis exerted by hydrogen bonding, and for solvent-induced electron localization in symmetric mixed-valence complexes. All conclusions are based on strong parallels found between the results of calculations performed using density-functional theory (DFT) and time-dependent DFT (TDDFT), complete-active-space self-consistent-field (CASSCF) with second-order perturbation-theory correction (CASPT2) theory, and equation-of-motion coupled cluster (EOM-CCSD) theory, calculations that are verified through detailed comparison of computed properties with experimental data for both the isolated molecules and the ground-state hydrogen bond.  相似文献   

2.
Density functional theory and CASSCF calculations have been used to optimize the geometries of binuclear gold(I) complexes [H(3)PAu(C[triple bond]C)(n)AuPH(3)] (n=1-6) in their ground states and selected lowest energy (3)(pi pi*) excited states. Vertical excitation energies obtained by time-dependent density functional calculations for the spin-forbidden singlet-triplet transitions have exponential-decay size dependence. The predicted singlet-triplet splitting limit of [H(3)PAu(C[triple bond]C)(proportional/variant)AuPH(3)] is about 8317 cm(-1). Calculated singlet-triplet transition energies are in reasonable agreement with available experimental observations. The effect of the heavy atom Au spin-orbit coupling on the (3)(pi pi*) emission of these metal-capped one-dimensional carbon allotropes has been investigated by MRCI calculations. The contribution of the spin- and dipole-allowed singlet excited state to the spin-orbit-coupling wave function of the (3)(pi pi*) excited state makes the low-lying acetylenic triplet excited states become sufficiently allowed so as to appear in both electronic absorption and emission.  相似文献   

3.
Hydrogen bonding involving azine and its derivatives such as nucleic bases is very important for understanding the structure and function of biological systems. In this work, we have investigated the hydrogen bonding structures of the hydrated cluster and dilute aqueous solution of s-tetrazine using computer simulation techniques, and evaluated the absorption and fluorescence shifts of the lowest 1(n, pi*) excitation of s-tetrazine solution using our solvent shift method. For the s-tetrazine-water cluster, a linear orthodox hydrogen bond arrangement is predicted in both ground and excited states with small structural and energetic differences, and a bifurcated hydrogen bond isomerization is anticipated. Further, ab initio calculations have verified these conformations. For the s-tetrazine-water solution, a mixture of two hydrogen bonding arrangements is found to be in both ground and excited states, resulting in small magnitudes of absorption and fluorescence solvent shifts. This finalizes our series investigation of hydrogen bonding and solvent shifts of dilute azines in water.  相似文献   

4.
Density functional theory B3LYP method and second-order Moller-Plesset perturbation theory MP2 method were employed to obtain the optimized geometries of the ground state and interaction energy for diazines and water complexes. The results show that the ground state complexes have strong hydrogen bonding interaction with -20.99, -16.73 and -15.31 kJ/mol after basis set superposition error and zero-point vibration energy correction for pyridazine-water, pyrimidine-water and pyrazine-water, respectively, and large red-shift for the symmetric H-O stretching vibration frequencies due to the formation of N…H-O hydrogen bond in the diazine-water complexes. The NBO analysis indicates that intermolecular charge transfer are 0.0316, 0.0255 and 0.0265 e respectively. In addition, the first singlet (n,n*) vertical excitation energy of the monomer and the hydrogen bonding complexes between diazines and water was investigated by time-dependent density functional theory.  相似文献   

5.
The well-known benzophenone intersystem crossing from S(1)(n,pi*) to T(1)(n,pi*) states, for which direct transition is forbidden by El-Sayed rules, is reinvestigated by subpicosecond time-resolved absorption spectroscopy and effective data analysis for various excitation wavelengths and solvents. Multivariate curve resolution alternating least-squares analysis is used to perform bilinear decomposition of the time-resolved spectra into pure spectra of overlapping transient species and their associated time-dependent concentrations. The results suggest the implication of an intermediate (IS) in the relaxation process of the S(1) state. Therefore, a two step kinetic model, S(1) --> IS --> T(1), is successfully implemented as an additional constraint in the soft-modeling algorithm. Although this intermediate, which has a spectrum similar to the one of T(1)(n,pi*) state, could be artificially induced by vibrational relaxation, it is tentatively assigned to a hot T(1)(n,pi*) triplet state. Two characteristic times are reported for the transition S(1) --> IS and IS --> T(1), approximately 6.5 ps and approximately 10 ps respectively, without any influence of the solvent. Moreover, an excitation wavelength effect is discovered suggesting the participation of unrelaxed singlet states in the overall process. To go further discussing the spectroscopic relevancy of IS and to rationalize the expected involvement of the T(2)(pi,pi*) state, we also investigate 4-methoxybenzophenone. For this neighboring molecule, triplet energy level is tunable through solvent polarity and a clear correlation is established between the intermediate resolved by multivariate data analysis and the presence of a T(2)(pi,pi*) above the T(1)(n,pi*) triplet. It is therefore proposed that the benzophenone intermediate species is a T(1)(n,pi*) high vibrational level in interaction with T(2)(pi,pi*) state.  相似文献   

6.
CASSCF computations show that the hydrogen-transfer-induced fluorescence quenching of the (1)(pi,pi*) excited state of zwitterionic tryptophan occurs in three steps: (1) formation of an intramolecular excited-state complex, (2) hydrogen transfer from the amino acid side chain to the indole chromophore, and (3) radiationless decay through a conical intersection, where the reaction path bifurcates to a photodecarboxylation and a phototautomerization route. We present a general model for fluorescence quenching by hydrogen donors, where the radiationless decay occurs at a conical intersection (real state crossing). At the intersection, the reaction responsible for the quenching is aborted, because the reaction path bifurcates and can proceed forward to the products or backward to the reactants. The position of the intersection along the quenching coordinate depends on the nature of the states and, in turn, affects the formation of photoproducts during the quenching. For a (1)(n,pi*) model system reported earlier (Sinicropi, A.; Pogni, R.; Basosi, R.; Robb, M. A.; Gramlich, G.; Nau, W. M.; Olivucci, M. Angew. Chem., Int. Ed. 2001, 40, 4185-4189), the ground and the excited state of the chromophore are hydrogen acceptors, and the excited-state hydrogen transfer is nonadiabatic and leads directly to the intersection point. There, the hydrogen transfer is aborted, and the reaction can return to the reactant pair or proceed further to the hydrogen-transfer products. In the tryptophan case, the ground state is not a hydrogen acceptor, and the excited-state hydrogen transfer is an adiabatic, sequential proton and electron transfer. The decay to the ground state occurs along a second reaction coordinate associated with decarboxylation of the amino acid side chain and the corresponding aborted conical intersection. The results show that, for (1)(pi,pi*) states, the hydrogen transfer alone is not sufficient to induce the quenching, and explain why fluorescence quenching induced by hydrogen donors is less general for (1)(pi,pi*) than for (1)(n,pi*) states.  相似文献   

7.
Hydrogen bonding of the type SiO-H...A (A = O, N) has been studied in the gas phase for simple H3SiOH.acceptor complexes with the acceptor molecules being O(H)SiH3, OH2, O(H)CH3, O(CH3)2, O(CH3)SiH3, O(SiH3)2, NH3, N(CH3)H2, N(CH3)2H, N(CH3)3, N(CH3)2C6H5, and NC5H5, respectively, at the B3LYP/6-311+(2d,p) level of theory, using Bader's atoms in molecules (AIM) and Weinhold's natural bond orbital (NBO) methodology. For all complexes (except H3SiOH.N(CH3)2C6H5) the complex energy Eadd. is a good estimate for the hydrogen bond energy EHB, which is generally higher in N-acceptor complexes (-5.52 to -7.17 kcal mol-1) than in O-acceptor complexes (-2.09 to -5.06 kcal mol-1). In case of H3SiOH.N(CH3)2C6H5, EHB and Eadd. differ by the energy associated with the loss of n(N)-->pi conjugation in N(CH3)2C6H5 upon complex formation. EHB shows no correlation with O...A distances and the red shifts Deltanu(OH) of the OH-stretching vibrations when different acceptors are compared, although both parameters are commonly used to estimate the strength of the hydrogen bond from spectroscopic and diffraction data. A good linear correlation of the hydrogen bond energy EHB has been established with parameters derived from the AIM and NBO analyses, namely, the electron densities rho(HA) and rho(OH) at the H...A and O-H bond critical points (BCPs) and the NLMO bond orders BONLMO(HA) of the H...A bonds of the H3SiOH.acceptor complexes as well as the change of natural charges DeltaqNPA(O) at the O-donor atom upon H3SiOH.acceptor complex formation. Hydrogen bonding of the type SiO-H...A (A = O, N) has been also studied in the related cyclic multiple H3SiOH.acceptor complexes (H3SiOH)3, (H3SiOH)2.NC5H5, and (H3SiOH)4, respectively, at the same level of theory. Cooperative hydrogen bonding is evident for all cyclic multiple H3SiOH.acceptor complexes, whereby the strongest concomitant strengthening of the hydrogen bonds is observed for (H3SiOH)4 and (H3SiOH)2.NC5H5.  相似文献   

8.
The ultraviolet absorption spectra in the static vapor phase and the laser induced fluorescence spectra (both fluorescence excitation and single vibronic level fluorescence spectra) of jet-cooled 1,2,3,4-tetrahydronaphthalene have been used along with theoretical calculations to assign many of the vibronic levels in the S1(pi,pi*) state. These have been compared to the corresponding vibrational levels for the S0 ground state. Analysis of the upper states of the ring-twisting vibration nu(31) and three other low-frequency modes has allowed us to construct an energy map of the lowest vibrational quantum states for both S0 and S1. The molecule is highly twisted in both electronic states with high barriers to planarity, which are calculated to be 4811 cm(-1) for S0 and 5100 cm(-1) for S1. However, the experimental data show that the barrier should be lower in the S1 state.  相似文献   

9.
The fluorescence excitation (jet cooled), single vibrational level fluorescence, and the ultraviolet absorption spectra of coumaran associated with its S1(pi,pi*) electronic excited state have been recorded and analyzed. The assignment of more than 70 transitions has allowed a detailed energy map of both the S0 and S1 states of the ring-puckering (nu45) vibration to be determined in the excited states of nine other vibrations, including the ring-flapping (nu43) and ring-twisting (nu44) vibrations. Despite some interaction with nu43 and nu44, a one-dimensional potential energy function for the ring puckering very nicely predicts the experimentally determined energy level spacings. In the S1(pi,pi*) state coumaran is quasiplanar with a barrier to planarity of 34 cm(-1) and with energy minima at puckering angles of +/-14 degrees. The corresponding ground state (S0) values are 154 cm(-1) and +/-25 degrees . As is the case with the related molecules indan, phthalan, and 1,3-benzodioxole, the angle strain in the five-membered ring increases upon the pi-->pi* transition within the benzene ring and this increases the rigidity of the attached ring. Theoretical calculations predict the expected increases of the carbon-carbon bond lengths of the benzene ring in S1, and they predict a barrier of 21 cm(-1) for this state. The bond length increases at the bridgehead carbon-carbon bond upon electron excitation to the S1(pi,pi*) state give rise to angle changes which result in greater angle strain and a nearly planar molecule.  相似文献   

10.
Azobenzene E<==>Z photoisomerization, following excitation to the bright S(pi pi*) state, is investigated by means of ab initio CASSCF optimizations and perturbative CASPT2 corrections. Specifically, by elucidating the S(pi pi*) deactivation paths, we explain the mechanism responsible for azobenzene photoisomerization, the lower isomerization quantum yields observed for the S(pi pi*) excitation than for the S1(n pi*) excitation in the isolated molecule, and the recovery of the Kasha rule observed in sterically hindered azobenzenes. We find that a doubly excited state is a photoreaction intermediate that plays a very important role in the decay of the bright S(pi pi*). We show that this doubly excited state, which is immediately populated by molecules excited to S(pi pi*), drives the photoisomerization along the torsion path and also induces a fast internal conversion to the S1(n pi*) at a variety of geometries, thus shaping (all the most important features of) the S(pi pi*) decay pathway and photoreactivity. We reach this conclusion by determining the critical structures, the minimum energy paths originating on the bright S(pi pi*) state and on other relevant excited states including S1(n pi*), and by characterizing the conical intersection seams that are important in deciding the photochemical outcome. The model is consistent with the most recent time-resolved spectroscopic and photochemical data.  相似文献   

11.
We present global potential energy surfaces for the three lowest triplet states in O(3P)+H2O(X1A1) collisions and present results of classical dynamics calculations on the O(3P)+H2O(X1A1)-->OH(X2pi)+OH(X2pi) reaction using these surfaces. The surfaces are spline-based fits of approximately 20,000 fixed geometry ab initio calculations at the complete-active-space self-consistent field+second-order perturbation theory (CASSCF+MP2) level with a O(4s3p2d1f)/H(3s2p) one electron basis set. Computed rate constants compare well to measurements in the 1000-2500 K range using these surfaces. We also compute the total, rovibrationally resolved, and differential angular cross sections at fixed collision velocities from near threshold at approximately 4 km s(-1) (16.9 kcal mol(-1) collision energy) to 11 km s(-1) (122.5 kcal mol(-1) collision energy), and we compare these computed cross sections to available space-based and laboratory data. A major finding of the present work is that above approximately 40 kcal mol(-1) collision energy rovibrationally excited OH(X2pi) products are a significant and perhaps dominant contributor to the observed 1-5 micro spectral emission from O(3P)+H2O(X1A1) collisions. Another important result is that OH(X2pi) products are formed in two distinct rovibrational distributions. The "active" OH products are formed with the reagent O atom, and their rovibrational distributions are extremely hot. The remaining "spectator" OH is relatively rovibrationally cold. For the active OH, rotational energy is dominant at all collision velocities, but the opposite holds for the spectator OH. Summed over both OH products, below approximately 50 kcal mol(-1) collision energy, vibration dominates the OH internal energy, and above approximately 50 kcal mol(-1) rotation is greater than vibrational energy. As the collision energy increases, energy is diverted from vibration to mostly translational energy. We note that the present fitted surfaces can also be used to investigate direct collisional excitation of H2O(X1A1) by O(3P) and also OH(X2pi)+OH(X2pi) collisions.  相似文献   

12.
A unified picture is presented of water interacting with pyridine, pyridazine, pyrimidine, and pyrazine on the S(1) manifold in both gas-phase dimers and in aqueous solution. As (n,π*) excitation to the S(1) state removes electrons from the ground-state hydrogen bond, this analysis provides fundamental understanding of excited-state hydrogen bonding. Traditional interpretations view the excitation as simply breaking hydrogen bonds to form dissociated molecular products, but reactive processes such as photohydrolysis and excited-state proton coupled electron transfer (PCET) are also possible. Here we review studies performed using equations-of-motion coupled-cluster theory (EOM-CCSD), multireference perturbation theory (CASPT2), time-dependent density-functional theory (TD-DFT), and excited-state Monte Carlo liquid simulations, adding new results from symmetry-adapted-cluster configuration interaction (SAC-CI) and TD-DFT calculations. Invariably, gas-phase molecular dimers are identified as stable local minima on the S(1) surface with energies less than those for dissociated molecular products. Lower-energy biradical PCET minima are also identified that could lead to ground-state recombination and hence molecular dissociation, dissociation into radicals or ions, or hydration reactions leading to ring cleavage. For pyridine.water, the calculated barriers to PCET are low, suggesting that this mechanism is responsible for fluorescence quenching of pyridine.water at low energies rather than accepted higher-energy Dewar-benzene based "channel three" process. Owing to (n,π*) excitation localization, much higher reaction barriers are predicted for the diazines, facilitating fluorescence in aqueous solution and predicting that the as yet unobserved fluorescence from pyridazine.water and pyrimidine.water should be observable. Liquid simulations based on the assumption that the solvent equilibrates on the fluorescence timescale quantitatively reproduce the observed spectral properties, with the degree of (n,π*) delocalization providing a critical controlling factor.  相似文献   

13.
The T1(n,pi*) <-- S0 transition of 2-cyclopenten-1-one (2CP) was investigated by using phosphorescence excitation (PE) spectroscopy in a free-jet expansion. The origin band, near 385 nm, is the most intense feature in the T1(n,pi*) <-- S0 PE spectrum. A short progression in the ring-bending mode (nu'(30)) is also observed. The effective vibrational temperature in the jet is estimated at 50 K. The spectral simplification arising from jet cooling helps confirm assignments made previously in the room-temperature cavity ringdown (CRD) absorption spectrum, which is congested by vibrational hot bands. In addition to the origin and nu'(30) assignments, the jet-cooled PE spectrum also confirms the 28(0)(1) (C=O out-of-plane wag), 29(0)(1) (C=C twist), and 19(0)(1) (C=O in-plane wag) band assignments that were made in the T1(n,pi*) <-- S0 room-temperature CRD spectrum. The temporal decay of the T1 state of 2CP was investigated as a function of vibronic excitation. Phosphorescence from the v' = 0 level persists the entire time the molecules traverse the emission detection zone. Thus the phosphorescence lifetime of the v' = 0 level is significantly longer than the 2 micros transit time through the viewing zone. Higher vibrational levels in the T1 state have shorter phosphorescence lifetimes, on the order of 2 micros or less. The concomitant reduction in emission quantum yield causes the higher vibronic bands (above 200 cm(-1)) in the PE spectrum to be weak. It is proposed that intersystem crossing to highly vibrationally excited levels of the ground state is responsible for the faster decay and diminished quantum yield. The jet cooling affords partial rotational resolution in the T1(n,pi*) <-- S0 spectrum of 2CP. The rotational structure of the origin band was simulated by using inertial constants available from a previously reported density functional (DFT) calculation of the T1(n,pi*) state, along with spin constants obtained via a fitting procedure. Intensity parameters were also systematically varied. The optimized intensity factors support a model that identifies the S2(pi,pi*) <-- S0 transition in 2CP as the sole source of oscillator strength for the T1(n,pi*) <-- S0 transition.  相似文献   

14.
The phosphorescence excitation (PE) spectrum of 4H-pyran-4-one (4PN) vapor at 40-50 degrees C was recorded near 366 nm. The most intense vibronic feature in this region of the spectrum is the T(1)(n,pi*)<--S(0) origin band. The value of nu(0) for the 0(0)(0) transition was determined to be 27 291.5 cm(-1) by comparing the observed spectrum to a simulation in the T(1)<--S(0) origin-band region. Attached to the origin band in the PE spectrum are several Deltav=0 sequence bands involving low-frequency ring modes. From the positions of these bands, together with the known ground-state combination differences, fundamental frequencies for nu(18') (ring bending), nu(13') (ring twisting), and nu(10') (in-plane ring deformation) in the T(1)(n,pi*) excited state were determined to be 126, 269, and 288 cm(-1), respectively. These values represent drops of 15%, 32%, and 43%, compared to the respective fundamental frequencies in the S(0) state. The changes in these ring frequencies indicate that the effects of T(1)(n,pi*)<--S(0) excitation extend beyond the nominal carbonyl chromophore and involve the conjugated ring atoms as well. The delocalization may be more extensive for T(1)(n,pi*) than for S(1)(n,pi*) excitation.  相似文献   

15.
Density functional theory B3LYP method with 6-31++G** basis was used to optimize the geometries of the ground states for 1,2,3-triazine-(H2O)n (n=1,2,3) complexes. All calculations indicate that the 1,2,3-triazine-water complexes in the ground states have strong hydrogen-bonding interaction, and the complex having a N…H-O hydrogen bond and a chain of water molecules which is terminated by a O…H-C hydrogen bond is the most stable. The H-O stretching modes of complexes are red-shifted relative to that of the monomer. In addition, the Natural bond orbit (NBO) analysis indicates that the intermolecular charge transfer between 1,2,3-triazine and water is 0.0222e, 0.0261e and 0.0273e for the most stable 1:1, 1:2 and 1:3 complexes, respectively. The first singlet (n, π*) vertical excitation energy of the monomer 1,2,3-triazine and the hydrogen-bonding complexes of 1,2,3-triazine-(H2O)n were investigated by time-dependent density functional theory.  相似文献   

16.
Invisible energy levels of the T1(pi, pi*) state of p-methoxybenzaldehyde (anisaldehyde) and p-cyanobenzaldehyde vapors have been estimated through the temperature dependence of the T2(n, pi*) --> S0 phosphorescence and the S1(n, pi*) --> S0 delayed fluorescence spectra. It is shown that the T1(pi, pi*) levels are located at 900 +/- 100 and 300 +/- 100 cm(-1) below the T2(n, pi*) levels, respectively, for p-methoxybenzaldehyde and p-cyanobenzaldehyde vapors. The estimated T1 energy levels are in good agreement with the phosphorescence origins in rigid glass at 77 K.  相似文献   

17.
The character of the hydrogen bonding and the excited state proton transfer (ESPT) in the model system HCN...H(2)O is investigated. The PES of the two lowest excited states of the H(2)O...HCN complex was calculated using the CASPT2 method. The nonadiabatic coupling of the two states of the (pi-->pi*) and (pi-->sigma*) character is responsible for the excited state proton/hydrogen transfer. Compared to the ground state, the barrier for this process is significantly smaller. An increased number of water molecules in the complex with cyclic hydrogen-bonded network causes a large blue shift of the state of the (pi-->sigma*) character. The question of the dissociation of the complex in its excited state is also addressed.  相似文献   

18.
Our method for estimating solvent effects on electronic spectra in media with strong solute-solvent interactions is applied here to calculate the absorption and fluorescence solvatochromatic shifts of dilute triazines in water. First, the ab initio CASSCF method is used to estimate the gas-phase electronic excitation properties and state charge distributions; second, Monte Carlo simulations are performed to elucidate liquid structures around the ground and excited state solute; finally, the solvent shift is evaluated based on the gas-phase charge distributions and the explicit solvent structures. For the dilute triazine solutions, simulations predict one linear (different) hydrogen bond attached to each nitrogen atom. Upon the first (1)(n, pi*)electronic excitation one hydrogen bond is completely broken. For the absorption and fluorescence spectra, our calculations demonstrated that the specific solvent-solute interaction, in any electronic state, plays a critical role in the determination of solvent shifts.  相似文献   

19.
Density functional theory and CASSCF calculations have been used to determine equilibrium geometries and vibrational frequencies of metal-capped one-dimensional pi-conjugated complexes (H3P)Au(C[triple chemical bond]C)(n)(Ph) (n = 1-6), (H3P)Au(C[triple chemical bond]CC6H4)(C[triple chemical bond]CPh), and H3P--Au(C[triple chemical bond]CC6H4)C[triple chemical bond]CAu--PH3 in their ground states and selected low-lying pi(pi)* excited states. Vertical excitation energies for spin-allowed singlet-singlet and spin-forbidden singlet-triplet transitions determined by the time-dependent density functional theory show good agreement with available experimental observations. Calculations indicate that the lowest energy 3(pi(pi)*) excited state is unlikely populated by the direct electronic excitation, while the low-lying singlet and triplet states, slightly higher in energy than the lowest triplet state, are easily accessible by the excitation light used in experiments. A series of radiationless transitions among related excited states yield the lowest 3(pi(pi)*) state, which has enough long lifetimes to exhibit its photochemical reactivities.  相似文献   

20.
The synthesis and X-ray structural and spectroscopic characterization for LAuC triple bond CAuL x 4CHCl(3) and LAuC triple bond C--C triple bond CAuL x 2CH(2)Cl(2) (1 x 4CHCl(3) and 2 x 2CH(2)Cl(2), respectively; L = PCy(3), tricyclohexylphosphine) are reported. The bridging C(n)(2-) units are structurally characterized as acetylene or diacetylene units, with C triple bond C distances of 1.19(1) and 1.199(8) A for 1 x 4CHCl(3) and 2 x 2CH(2)Cl(2), respectively. An important consequence of bonding to Au(I) for the C(n)(2-) moieties is that the lowest-energy electronic excited states, which are essentially acetylenic (3)(pi pi*) in nature, acquire sufficient allowedness via Au spin-orbit coupling to appear prominently in both electronic absorption and emission spectra. The origin lines for both complexes are well-defined and are observed at 331 and 413 nm for 1 and 2, respectively. Sharp vibronic progressions corresponding to v(C triple bond C) are observed in both emission and absorption spectra. The acetylenic (3)(pi pi) excited state of 2 has a long lifetime (tau(0) = 10.8 mus) in dichloromethane at room temperature and is a powerful reductant (E degrees [Au(2)(+)/Au(2)] < or = -1.85 V vs SSCE).  相似文献   

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