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1.
Quantum-chemical calculations of the Thioflavin T (ThT) molecule in the ground S0 and first excited singlet S1 states were carried out. It has been established that ThT in the ground state has a noticeable nonplanar conformation: the torsion angle phi between the benzthiazole and the dimethylaminobenzene rings has been found to be approximately 37 degrees. The energy barriers of the intramolecular rotation appearing at phi = 0 and 90 degrees are quite low: semiempirical AM1 and PM3 methods predict values approximately 700 cm-1 and ab initio methods approximately 1000-2000 cm(-1). The INDO/S calculations of vertical transitions to the S1(abs) excited state have revealed that energy ES1(abs) is minimal for the twisted conformation with phi = 90 degrees and that the intramolecular charge-transfer takes place upon the ThT fragments' rotation from phi = 0 to 90 degrees. Ab initio CIS/RHF calculations were performed to find optimal geometries in the excited S1 state for a series of conformers having fixed phi values. The CIS calculations have predicted a minimum of the S1 state energy at phi approximately 21 degrees; however, the energy values are 1.5 times overestimated in comparison to experimental data. Excited state energy dependence on the torsion angle phi, obtained by the INDO/S method, reveals that ES1(fluor) is minimal at phi = approximately 80-100 degrees, and a plateau is clearly observed for torsion angles ranging from 20 to 50 degrees. On the basis of the calculation results, the following scheme of photophysical processes in the excited S1 state of the ThT is suggested. According to the model, a twisted internal charge-transfer (TICT) process takes place for the ThT molecule in the excited singlet state, resulting in a transition from the fluorescent locally excited (LE) state to the nonfluorescent TICT state, accompanied by torsion angle phi growth from 37 to 90 degrees. The TICT process effectively competes with radiative transition from the LE state and is responsible for significant quenching of the ThT fluorescence in low-viscosity solvents. For viscous solvents or when the ThT molecule is located in a rather rigid microenvironment, for example, when it is bound to amyloid fibrils, internal rotation in the dye molecule is blocked due to steric hindrance, which results in suppression of the LE --> TICT quenching process and in a high quantum yield of fluorescence.  相似文献   

2.
Singlet excitation energy calculations for a series of acceptor para-substituted N,N-dimethyl-anilines that are dual (4-(N,N-dimethylamino)benzonitrile, 4DMAB-CN, 4-(N,N-dimethylamino)benzaldhyde, 4DMAB-CHO, 1-methyl-7-cyano-2,3,4,5-tetrahydro-1H-1-benzazepine, NMC7) and nondual (4-aminobenzonitrile, 4AB-CN, 3-(N,N-dimethylamino)benzonitrile, 3DMAB-CN, and 4-nitro(N,N-dimethyl) aniline, 4DMAB-NO(2)) fluorescent have been performed using time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT). The B3LYP and MPW1PW91 functionals with a 6-311+G(2d,p) (Bg) basis set have been used to compute excitation energies. Ground-state geometries were optimized using density functional theory (DFT) with both B3LYP and MPW1PW91 functionals combined with a 6-31G(d) basis set. For most of the molecules presented in this study, potential energy surfaces have been computed according to the coordinates related to the three following mechanisms proposed in the literature: twisting, wagging, and planar intramolecular charge transfer (ICT). Comparison of the three models for the different molecules leads to the conclusion that only the twisting ICT model is able to explain the low frequency, strongly solvent-dependent energy band present in the fluorescence spectra. According to this model, the 4AB-CN molecule is calculated to be nondual fluorescent in agreement with the experimental spectra. The single band observed in the fluorescence spectra of TMAB-CN (4-(N,N-dimethylamino)-3,5-(dimethyl)benzonitrile) is due to a large stabilization of the charge-transfer excited state along the twisting coordinate. The nondual fluorescence of the 4DMAB-NO(2) molecule is explained by the same mechanism. In the case of 3DMAB-CN, the single observed emission, which is solvent-dependent, has been assigned to the lowest charge-transfer excited state. The dual fluorescence of 4DMAB-CN and 4DMAB-CHO is explained within the twisting ICT model by a double mechanism (already proposed by Serrano et al.: Serrano-Andrés, L.; Merchán, M.; Roos, B. J.; Lindh, R. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 1995, 117, 3189) that involves the presence of two low-lying states close enough in energy. The observation of dual fluorescence in NMC7, that has been one of the origins of the planar ICT model put forward by Zachariasse et al. (Zachariasse, K.; van der Haar, T.; Hebecker, A.; Leinhos, U.; Kühnle, W. Pure Appl. Chem. 1993, 65, 1745), could be fully understood by a double mechanism within the twisting ICT model. Within the set of investigated molecules, our calculations confirm that the twisting ICT model is the only mechanism acceptable to explain the dual and nondual fluorescence phenomenon. Our calculations are in complete agreement with experimental data.  相似文献   

3.
Quantum-chemical calculations with the time-dependent density function theory (TDDFT) have been carried out for 5-phenyl-5H-phenanthridin-6-one (PP). For this molecule, dual fluorescence and in- tramolecular charge transfer (ICT) were experimentally observed. The B3LYP functional with 6-311 G (2d, p) basis set has been used for the theoretical calculations. The solvent effects have been described within the polarizable continuum model (PCM). Ground-state geometry optimization reveals that the phenyl/phenanthridinone dihedral angle equals 90.0°, a nearly perpendicular structure. Vertical ab- sorption energy calculations characterize the lower singlet excited states both in gas phase and in solvents. It can be found that the lower excited states have locally excitation (LE) feature. Through constructing the potential energy curves of both isolated and solvated systems describing the LE→ICT reaction and fluorescence emission, we obtain the enthalpy difference ΔH between the LE and ICT states, energy barrier Ea, and energy difference δEFC, indicating the structural changes taking place during the ICT reaction. Potential curve and calculated emission energies for both isolated and sol- vated systems show a dual fluorescence phenomenon, consisting of a LE emission band and a red-shifted ICT band. Our calculations including the solvent effects indicate that the dual fluorescence is brought about by the change in molecular structure connected with the planarization of the twisted N-phenylphenanthridinone during the ICT reaction.  相似文献   

4.
4-(N,N-Dimethyl-amino)benzonitrile (DMABN) is a prototype molecule for dual fluorescence. The anomalous emission has been attributed to an intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) state, and the structure of the latter is still subject to some controversy. We applied a recently developed analytical gradient code for the approximate coupled-cluster singles-and-doubles method CC2 in combination with accurate basis sets to address this problem. Fully optimized excited state structures are presented for the ICT state and the so-called locally excited state, and recent transient IR and Raman measurements on the excited states are interpreted by means of calculated harmonic frequencies. Strong evidence is found for an electronic decoupling of the phenyl and the dimethyl-amino moiety, resulting in a minimum structure for the ICT state with a twisted geometry. In contrast to previous findings, the structure of this state is, at least in the gas phase, not C(2v) symmetric but distorted towards C(s) symmetry. The distortion coordinate is a pyramidalization of the phenyl carbon atom carrying the dimethyl-amino group. The results from the CC2 model are supported by single-point calculations using more elaborate coupled-cluster models (CCSD, CCSDR(3)) and by CASSCF calculations.  相似文献   

5.
The intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) reaction of 1-tert-butyl-6-cyano-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroquinoline (NTC6) in n-hexane and acetonitrile (MeCN) is investigated by picosecond fluorescence experiments as a function of temperature and by femtosecond transient absorption measurements at room temperature. NTC6 in n-hexane is dual fluorescent from a locally excited (LE) and an ICT state, with a quantum yield ratio Phi'(ICT)/Phi(LE) of 0.35 at +25 degrees C and 0.67 at -95 degrees C, whereas in MeCN mainly an ICT emission is observed. From the temperature dependence of Phi'(ICT)/Phi(LE) for NTC6 in n-hexane, an LE/ICT enthalpy difference DeltaH of -2.4 kJ/mol is determined. For comparison, 1-isopropyl-6-cyano-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroquinoline (NIC6) is also investigated. This molecule does not undergo an ICT reaction, because of its larger energy gap DeltaE(S1,S2). From the molar absorption coefficient epsilonmax of NTC6 as compared with other aminobenzonitriles, a ground-state amino twist angle theta of approximately 22 degrees is deduced. The increase of epsilonmax between n-hexane and MeCN indicates that theta decreases when the solvent polarity becomes larger. Whereas single-exponential LE fluorescence decays are obtained for NIC6 in n-hexane and MeCN, the LE and ICT decays of NTC6 in these solvents are double exponential. For NTC6 in n-hexane at -95 degrees C, with a shortest decay time of 20 ps, the forward (ka=2.5x10(10) s(-1)) and backward (kd=2.7x10(10) s(-1)) rate constants for the LE<-->ICT reaction are determined from the time-resolved LE and ICT fluorescence spectra. For NTC6 in n-hexane and MeCN, the excited-state absorption (ESA) spectrum at 200 fs after excitation is similar to the LE(ESA) spectra of NIC6 and 4-(dimethylamino)benzonitrile (DMABN), showing that LE is the initially excited state for NTC6. These results indicate that the LE states of NTC6, NIC6, and DMABN have a comparable molecular structure. The ICT(ESA) spectrum of NTC6 in n-hexane and MeCN resembles that of DMABN in MeCN, likewise indicating a similar ICT structure for NTC6 and DMABN. From the decay of the LE absorption and the corresponding growing-in for the ICT state of NTC6, it is concluded that the ICT state originates from the LE precursor and is not formed by direct excitation from S0, nor via an S2/ICT conical intersection. The same conclusion was made from the time-resolved (picosecond) fluorescence spectra, where there is no ICT emission at time zero. The decay of the LE(ESA) band of NTC6 in n-hexane occurs with a shortest time tau2 of 2.2 ps. The ICT reaction is much faster (tau2 = 0.82 ps) in the strongly polar MeCN. The absence of excitation wavelength dependence (290 and 266 nm) for the ESA spectra in MeCN also shows that LE is the ICT precursor. With NIC6 in n-hexane and MeCN, a decay or growing-in of the femtosecond ESA spectra is not observed, in line with the absence of an ICT reaction involving an S2/ICT conical intersection.  相似文献   

6.
The photophysical properties of m- and p-cyano N-phenylpyrrole (m- and p-PBN) are compared. Both compounds show highly red-shifted and strongly forbidden emission in polar solvents, assigned to a charge transfer state. The forbidden nature is indicative of very weak coupling between the two pi-systems, and a twisted emissive structure is suggested (TICT state). Comparison to quantum chemical calculations indicates that the twisted structure possesses an antiquinoid distortion of the benzonitrile group, i.e., the central bonds in the ring are lengthened instead of shortened. m-PBN is the first meta compound which shows a CT emission assignable to a TICT state. It differs from p-PBN by a less exergonic formation of the CT state from the LE/ICT quinoid state. Consequently, it shows only single LE/ICT fluorescence in nonpolar alkane solvents, whereas p-PBN shows dual fluorescence in this solvent (LE/ICT and TICT).  相似文献   

7.
Fast intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) accompanied by dual fluorescence from a locally excited (LE) and an ICT state taking place with N-phenylpyrrole (PP) in the solvent n-propyl cyanide (PrCN) is investigated as a function of temperature between 25 and -112 degrees C. The LE and ICT fluorescence decays from -45 to -70 degrees C can be adequately fitted with two exponentials, in accordance with a two state (LE + ICT) reaction mechanism, similar to what has been observed with PP in the more polar and less viscous alkyl cyanides acetonitrile (MeCN) and ethyl cyanide (EtCN). At lower temperatures, triple-exponential fits are required for the LE and ICT decays. The ICT emission band maximum of the time-resolved fluorescence spectra of PP in PrCN at -100 degrees C displays a spectral shift from 29 230 cm-1 at t = 0 to 27 780 cm-1 at infinite time, which equilibration process is attributed to dielectric solvent relaxation. From the time dependence of this shift, in global analysis with that of the band integrals BI(LE) and BI(ICT) of the time-resolved LE and ICT fluorescence bands, the decay times 119 and 456 ps are obtained. Dielectric relaxation times of 20 and 138 ps are determined from the double-exponential spectral solvation response function C(t) of the probe molecule 4-dimethylamino-4'-cyanostilbene in PrCN at -100 degrees C. It is concluded from the similarity of the times 119 ps (PP) and 138 ps (DCS) that the deviation from double-exponential character for the fluorescence decays of PP in PrCN below -70 degrees C is due to the interference of dielectric solvent relaxation with the ICT reaction. This fact complicates the kinetic analysis of the LE and ICT fluorescence decays. The kinetic analysis for PP in PrCN is hence restricted to temperatures between -70 and -45 degrees C. From this analysis, the forward and backward ICT activation energies Ea (12 kJ/mol) and Ed (17 kJ/mol) are obtained, giving an ICT stabilization enthalpy -DeltaH of 5 kJ/mol. A comparison of the reaction barriers for PP in the three alkyl cyanides PrCN, EtCN, and MeCN (J. Phys. Chem. A 2005, 109, 1497) shows that Ea becomes smaller with increasing solvent polarity (from 12 to 6 kJ/mol), whereas Ed remains effectively constant. Both observations are indicative of a late transition state for the LE --> ICT reaction. The significance of the Leffler-Hammond postulate in this connection is discussed: not primarily the energy of the LE, ICT, and transition states but rather the extent of charge transfer in these states determines whether an early or a late transition state is present.  相似文献   

8.
The newly synthesized aminobenzonitriles with two bulky amino substituents 4-(di-tert-butylamino)benzonitrile (DTABN) and 3-(di-tert-butylamino)benzonitrile (mDTABN) have strongly twisted amino groups in the ground state. From X-ray crystal analysis it is found that the amino twist angle theta of mDTABN equals 86.5 degrees , whereas a twist angle of around 75 degrees is deduced for DTABN from the extinction coefficient of its lowest-energy absorption band in n-hexane. Because of the electronic decoupling between the amino and benzonitrile groups caused by these large twist angles, the absorption of DTABN and mDTABN is relatively weak below 40000 cm-1, with extinction coefficients around 25 times smaller than those of the planar 4-(dimethylamino)benzonitrile (DMABN). DTABN as well as mDTABN undergo efficient intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) in the singlet excited state, in nonpolar (n-hexane) as well as in polar (acetonitrile) solvents. Their fluorescence spectra consist of an ICT emission band, without evidence for locally excited (LE) fluorescence. The occurrence of efficient ICT with mDTABN is different from the findings with all other N,N-dialkylaminobenzonitriles in the literature, for which ICT only appears with the para-derivative. From solvatochromic measurements, an ICT dipole moment of 17 D is determined for DTABN as well as for mDTABN, similar to that of DMABN. The picosecond fluorescence decays of DTABN (time resolution 3 ps) are effectively single exponential. Their decay time is equal to the ICT lifetime tau'0(ICT), which increases with solvent polarity from 0.86 ns in n-hexane to 3.48 ns in MeCN at 25 degrees C. The femtosecond excited-state absorption (ESA) spectra of DTABN in n-hexane and MeCN at 22 degrees C show a decay of the LE and a corresponding rise of the ICT absorption. The ICT reaction time is 70 fs in n-hexane and 60 fs in MeCN. DTABN and mDTABN may have a strongly twisted ICT state, similar to that of 6-cyanobenzoquinuclidine but different from that of DMABN.  相似文献   

9.
Fast and efficient intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) and dual fluorescence is observed with the planarized aminobenzonitrile 1-tert-butyl-6-cyano-1,2,3,4-tetrahydroquinoline (NTC6) in a series of solvents from n-hexane to acetonitrile and methanol. Such a reaction does not take place for the related molecules with 1-isopropyl (NIC6) and 1-methyl (NMC6) groups, nor with the 1-alkyl-5-cyanoindolines with methyl (NMC5), isopropyl (NIC5), or tert-butyl (NTC5) substituents. For these molecules, a single fluorescence band from a locally excited (LE) state is found. The charge transfer reaction of NTC6 is favored by its relatively small energy gap DeltaE(S(1),S(2)), in accordance with the PICT model for ICT in aminobenzonitriles. For the ICT state of NTC6, a dipole moment of around 19 D is obtained from solvatochromic measurements, similar to micro(e)(ICT) = 17 D of 4-(dimethylamino)benzonitrile (DMABN). For NMC5, NIC5, NTC5, NMC6, and NIC6, a dipole moment of around 10 D is determined by solvatochromic analysis, the same as that of the LE state of DMABN. For NTC6 in diethyl ether at -70 degrees C, the forward ICT rate constant (1.3 x 10(11) s(-1)) is much smaller than that of the back reaction (5.9 x 10(9) s(-1)), showing that the equilibrium is on the ICT side. The results presented here make clear that ICT can very well take place with a planarized molecule such as NTC6, when DeltaE(S(1),S(2)) is sufficiently small, indicating that a perpendicular twist of the amino group relative to the rest of the molecule is not necessary for reaching an ICT state with a large dipole moment. The six-membered alicyclic ring in NMC6, for example, prevents ICT by increasing DeltaE(S(1),S(2)) relative to that of DMABN.  相似文献   

10.
The origin of the dual fluorescence of DMABN (dimethylaminobenzonitrile) and other benzene derivatives is explained by a charge transfer model based on the properties of the benzene anion radical. It is shown that, in general, three low-lying electronically excited states are expected for these molecules, two of which are of charge transfer (CT) character, whereas the third is a locally excited (LE) state. Dual fluorescence may arise from any two of these states, as each has a different geometry at which it attains a minimum. The Jahn-Teller induced distortion of the benzene anion radical ground state helps to classify the CT states as having quinoid (Q) and antiquinoid (AQ) forms. The intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) state is formed by the transfer of an electron from a covalently linked donor group to an anti-bonding orbital of the pi-electron system of benzene. The change in charge distribution of the molecule in the CT states leads to the most significant geometry change undergone by the molecule which is the distortion of the benzene ring to a Q or AQ structure. As the dipole moment is larger in the perpendicular geometry than in the planar one, this geometry is preferred in polar solvents, supporting the twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) model. However, in many cases the planar conformation of CT excited states is lower in energy than that of the LE state, and dual fluorescence can be observed also from planar structures.  相似文献   

11.
For the electron acceptor/donor molecule N-phenylpyrrole (PP), the fast intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) reaction accompanied by dual fluorescence from a locally excited (LE) and an ICT state is investigated in alkyl cyanide solvents as a function of temperature. After a comparison of the X-ray crystal structure of PP with calculations from the literature, absorption and fluorescence spectra of PP in a series of solvents over a wide polarity range are discussed. ICT with PP strongly depends on solvent polarity and starts to appear in solvents more polar than diethyl ether. From an analysis of the ICT/LE fluorescence quantum yield ratio Phi'(ICT)/Phi(LE), approximate data for the change in enthalpy -DeltaH of the ICT reaction of PP are obtained, ranging from 9 kJ/mol in acetonitrile (MeCN) to 4 kJ/mol in n-butyl cyanide (BuCN). From ICT and LE fluorescence decays of PP measured as a function of temperature, the forward (Ea = 9 kJ/mol in ethyl cyanide (EtCN) and 6 kJ/mol in MeCN) and backward (Ed = 16 kJ/mol in EtCN and MeCN) ICT reaction barriers are determined. From these data, -Delta H (7 kJ/mol (EtCN); 10 kJ/mol (MeCN)) is calculated, in good agreement with the results coming from Phi'(ICT)/Phi(LE). The data for Ea show that the forward ICT barrier becomes smaller with increasing solvent polarity, whereas the absence of change for Ed comes from the compensating increase of -DeltaH. Both observations are indicative of a late transition state for the LE --> ICT reaction. For PP in EtCN and MeCN, the ICT radiative rate constant k'(f)(ICT) increases with temperature. This is caused by the ICT low transition dipole moment and hence does not contain information on the molecular structure (twisted or planar) of the ICT state. The fast ICT observed with PP supports our previous conclusion, based on a comparison of PP with its planarized derivative fluorazene, that the pyrrole and phenyl moieties in the ICT state of PP are coplanar and possess substantial electronic coupling.  相似文献   

12.
To understand the photophysical properties of intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) and twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) states on a gold nanoparticle (Au NP) surface, we have designed and synthesized a new coumarin molecule (C3) that exists both as ICT and TICT states in its excited state in a polar environment. On a Au NP surface, an excited C3 molecule only exists as an ICT state owing to restricted molecular rotation of a diethylamino group; as a result, no conversion from the ICT to TICT state was observed. Selection of the preferential state of a molecule with dual emitting states can be helpful for selected biological applications.  相似文献   

13.
Absorption and emission spectra of 9-N,N-dimethylaniline decahydroacridinedione (DMAADD) have been studied in different solvents. The fluorescence spectra of DMAADD are found to exhibit dual emission in aprotic solvents and single emission in protic solvents. The effect of solvent polarity and viscosity on the absorption and emission spectra has also been studied. The fluorescence excitation spectra of DMAADD monitored at both the emission bands are different. The presence of two different conformation of the same molecule in the ground state has lead to two close lying excited states, local excited (LE) and charge transfer (CT), and thereby results in the dual fluorescence of the dye. A CTstate involving the N,N-dimethylaniline group and the decahy droacridinedione chromophore as donor and acceptor, respectively, has been identified as the source of the long wavelength anomalous fluorescence. The experimental studies were supported by ab initio time dependent-density functional theory (TDDFT) calculations performed at the B3LYP/6-31G* level. The molecule possesses photoinduced electron transfer (PET) quenching in the LE state, which is confirmed by the fluorescence lifetime and fluorescent intensity enhancement in the presence of transition metal ions.  相似文献   

14.
Ab initio configuration interaction calculations have been performed to examine the electronic structures of both trans-4-dimethylamino-4′-cyanostilbene (DCS) and four types of perpendicularly twisted DCSs, trans-DCS is predominantly excited into the S1 state out of low-lying excited states. The S1 state is an intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) state in which the dipole moment is about twice as large as that in S0. The excited DCS at the 4-dimethylanilino twisted conformation, which becomes S1 in polar solvents, has a very much larger dipole moment than that in S1 to trans-DCS. This means that the geometrical structure of the twisted ICT (TICT) is the 4-dimethylanilino twisted form, not the dimethylamino twisted one which is well know from the TICT structure of 4-dimethylaminobenzonitrile. Received: 16 December 1998 / Accepted: 19 March 1999 / Published online: 9 September 1999  相似文献   

15.
Santhosh K  Samanta A 《Chemphyschem》2012,13(7):1956-1961
The kinetics of excited-state intramolecular electron-transfer reaction and dynamics of solvation of the intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) state of 4-(N,N'-dimethylamino)benzonitrile (DMABN) was studied in 1-butyl-3-methylimidazloium hexafluorophosphate, [bmim][PF(6)], by monitoring the dual fluorescence of the system. The picosecond time-resolved emission spectra (TRES) of DMABN exhibit decay of the locally excited (LE) emission intensity and shift of the ICT emission peak position with time, thus capturing the kinetics of evolution of the ICT state from the LE state and solvent relaxation of the ICT state. These results show that the LE→ICT transformation rate is determined not by the slow dynamics of solvation in ionic liquid, but is controlled mainly by the rate of structural reorganization of the molecule, which accompanies the electron-transfer process in this polar viscous medium. Even though both solvent reorganization around photo-excited DMABN and structural rearrangement of the molecule are dependent on the viscosity of the medium, it is the latter process that contributes to the viscosity dependence of the LE→ICT transformation.  相似文献   

16.
There is still controversy about the structure of the intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) emitting species in pi-electron donor-acceptor systems that show dual fluorescence. Although the twisted ICT model is quite generally accepted, the planar ICT model is not ruled out because firm experimental evidence supports it. Among these it is the fact that some rigidized systems such as bicyclic 4-aminobenzonitrile derivatives exhibit dual fluorescence. We present here an ab initio CASSCF/CASPT2 study of a series of these compounds with the alicyclic chain ranging from 5 to 7 carbon atoms and compare their ICT mechanism with the more flexible 4-aminobenzonitrile (ABN) and 4-(dimethylamino)benzonitrile (DMABN). We present the energetics, geometries, and valence bond structures of the critical points of the potential-energy surfaces of the ground, local excited (LE), and ICT states. Our results show that the photophysical differences of the studied systems may be rationalized by two factors: the position of the ICT and LE potential-energy surfaces at the first stages of the ICT reaction and the relative energies of the excited-state minima. Computational evidence is presented that a twisted ICT structure can be adopted in some molecules such as NXC6 and NXC7 and that the anomalous band of the fluorescence spectra of these systems is emitted from a twisted ICT species.  相似文献   

17.
The planar rigidized molecule fluorazene (FPP) undergoes fast reversible intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) in the excited state, with a reaction time of 12 ps in the polar solvent ethyl cyanide at -45 degrees C. The ICT state of FPP has a dipole moment mu(e)(ICT) of 13 D, much larger than that of the locally excited state LE (1 D). The ICT behavior of FPP is similar to that of its flexible counterpart N-phenylpyrrole (PP), for which mu(e)(ICT) = 12 D. These results show that intramolecular charge transfer to a planar ICT state can occur efficiently. In designing ICT systems capable of rapid switching, it is therefore important to realize that large amplitude motions such as those necessary for the formation of a twisted intramolecular charge transfer (TICT) state are not required.  相似文献   

18.
Polyimides such as 6F-6F and 6F-ODA and model N-arylphthalimides are stabilized against photooxidative degradation by their electron donor (D) – acceptor (A) character. We have investigated the precise origin(s) of this effect using D and A substituents on the N-aryl groups of these compounds. The lowest excited singlet state (S1) of N-arylphthalimides is an intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) state. A nominally twisted compound, N-(2-t-butylphenyl)phthalimide, shows greatly diminished CT absorption and blue-shifted fluorescence with reduced quantum yield when compared to the 4-t-butyl isomer with an identical N-aryl donor group. It therefore seems unnecessary to claim that the ICT state of phthalimides is a so-called TICT state. Quantum yield and fluorescence lifetime measurements lead to the conclusion that enhanced internal conversion from the ICT state (S1) to the ground state makes a significant contribution to photostabilization of these compounds by suppressing formation of the reactive triplet state. Further stabilization of polymer films may be afforded by triplet state self-quenching which is enhanced for 6F-ODA in increasingly poor solvents. N-alkylarylphthalimides in which the aryl and phthalimide groups are not formally conjugated but, rather, joined by flexible methylene ‘spacers’, exhibit a different kind of fluorescent intramolecular CT singlet state whose formation can also stabilize these compounds by suppressing triplet state formation.  相似文献   

19.
Novel donor-acceptor compounds consisting of singly bonded fluorene (Fl), benzothiadiazole (BT), and carbazole (Cz) functional units in the same molecule were investigated. Analysis of the optical spectra and fluorescence transients of the compounds revealed the domination of intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) states with high fluorescence quantum yield (72%-85%). A similar Cz-Fl-Cz compound exhibiting 100% fluorescence quantum yield and no ICT character was also studied as a reference to reveal the impact of electron-accepting BT groups. Thorough examination of the optical properties of the compounds in different media, i.e., dilute solution and polymer matrix, indicated their twisted conformations due to steric hindrance in the ground state and flattened geometry in the excited state for both reference and ICT compounds. Remarkable fluorescence efficiency losses (amounting to 70%) observed upon casting the molecular solutions into neat films were determined to originate from the low-fluorescent twisted conformers and migration-facilitated exciton quenching. The majority of emission efficiency losses (over 70%) were caused by the twisted conformers, whereas only less than 30% by exciton-migration-induced nonradiative deactivation.  相似文献   

20.
The fluorescence spectrum of the rigidified 4-cyanofluorazene (FPP4C) in n-hexane consists of a dual emission from a locally excited (LE) and an intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) state, with an ICT/LE fluorescence quantum yield ratio of Phi'(ICT)/Phi(LE) = 3.3 at 25 degrees C. With the flexible 4-cyano- N-phenylpyrrole (PP4C) in n-hexane, such an ICT reaction also takes place, with Phi'(ICT)/Phi(LE) = 1.5, indicating that for this reaction, a perpendicular twist of the pyrrole and benzonitrile moieties is not required. The ICT emission band of FPP4C and PP4C in n-hexane has vibrational structure, but a structureless band is observed in all other solvents more polar than the alkanes. The enthalpy difference Delta H of the LE --> ICT reaction in n-hexane, -11 kJ/mol for FPP4C and -7 kJ/mol for PP4C, is determined by analyzing the temperature dependence of Phi'(ICT)/Phi(LE). Using these data, the energy E(FC,ICT) of the Franck-Condon ground state populated by the ICT emission is calculated, 41 (FPP4C) and 40 kJ/mol (PP4C). These large values for E(FC,ICT) lead to the conclusion that with FPP4C and PP4C, direct ICT excitation, bypassing LE, does not take place. FPP4C has an ICT dipole moment of 15 D, similar to that of PP4C (16 D). Picosecond fluorescence decays allow the determination of the ICT lifetime, from which the radiative rate constant k'(f)(ICT) is derived, with comparable values for FPP4C and PP4C. This shows that an argument for a twisted ICT state of PP4C cannot come from k'(f)(ICT). After correction for the solvent refractive index and the energy of the emission maximum nu(max)(ICT), it appears that k'(f)(ICT) is solvent-polarity-independent. Femtosecond transient absorption with FPP4C and PP4C in n-hexane reveals that the ICT state is already nearly fully present at 100 fs after excitation, in rapid equilibrium with LE. In MeCN, the ICT state of FPP4C and PP4C is likewise largely developed at this delay time, and the reaction is limited by dielectric solvent relaxation, which shows that the ICT reaction is ultrafast, at the experimental time limit of 50 fs. PP4C and FPP4C have a similar planar ICT structure, without an appreciable twist of the pyrrole and benzonitrile subgroups. Their crystal structure is compared with calculations for the S0 ground state.  相似文献   

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