A comprehensive investigation of the photophysics of cyanophenylpyrrole derivatives has been carried out by means of steady-state, nanosecond and femtosecond resolved absorption and fluorescence techniques, and quantum-mechanical calculations. This study revealed that the investigated compounds (1-3) are highly fluorescent molecules (Phi(F) = 0.2-0.9) with lifetimes in the range 2-8 ns. The compounds exhibit weak hypsochromic solvatochromic changes in the absorption and large batochromic shifts in the fluorescence spectra. An increase in solvent polarity does not induce a reduction of the fluorescence quantum yields, but causes a lengthening of the fluorescence lifetimes. The density functional theoretical calculations predicted similar energies for S-1 and S-2, probably resulting in the state mixing and IT character of the relaxed S-1 state. Furthermore, the computed dipole moments have been found to be higher in the excited with respect to the ground state, in agreement with the strong solvatochromic properties experimentally observed in the emission spectra. Ultrafast transient absorption measurements indicated the existence of three decay components assigned to the hot Franck-Condon S-1 state that undergoes vibrational cooling (VC, several picoseconds), the species formed by VC undergoing a torsional motion of the C-C bond between the phenyl and the pyrrole ring (several hundreds of picoseconds), and the relaxed S-1 state that decays radiatively (nanoseconds). Indeed, the calculated optimized geometry of 1-3 in the ground state is characterized by a dihedral angle between the pyrrole and phenyl moieties of about 10-25 degrees, whereas the S1 state is predicted to be more planar than S-0. Due to the fast population of the relaxed S-1 states, the typical dual fluorescence reported for N-phenylpyrroles was not observed for 1-3. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Photophysics of cyanophenylpyrroles: Investigation of solvatochromic properties and charge transfer by ultrafast spectroscopy and DFT calculations

CLEMENTI, CATIA;CARLOTTI, BENEDETTA;ELISEI, Fausto
2015

Abstract

A comprehensive investigation of the photophysics of cyanophenylpyrrole derivatives has been carried out by means of steady-state, nanosecond and femtosecond resolved absorption and fluorescence techniques, and quantum-mechanical calculations. This study revealed that the investigated compounds (1-3) are highly fluorescent molecules (Phi(F) = 0.2-0.9) with lifetimes in the range 2-8 ns. The compounds exhibit weak hypsochromic solvatochromic changes in the absorption and large batochromic shifts in the fluorescence spectra. An increase in solvent polarity does not induce a reduction of the fluorescence quantum yields, but causes a lengthening of the fluorescence lifetimes. The density functional theoretical calculations predicted similar energies for S-1 and S-2, probably resulting in the state mixing and IT character of the relaxed S-1 state. Furthermore, the computed dipole moments have been found to be higher in the excited with respect to the ground state, in agreement with the strong solvatochromic properties experimentally observed in the emission spectra. Ultrafast transient absorption measurements indicated the existence of three decay components assigned to the hot Franck-Condon S-1 state that undergoes vibrational cooling (VC, several picoseconds), the species formed by VC undergoing a torsional motion of the C-C bond between the phenyl and the pyrrole ring (several hundreds of picoseconds), and the relaxed S-1 state that decays radiatively (nanoseconds). Indeed, the calculated optimized geometry of 1-3 in the ground state is characterized by a dihedral angle between the pyrrole and phenyl moieties of about 10-25 degrees, whereas the S1 state is predicted to be more planar than S-0. Due to the fast population of the relaxed S-1 states, the typical dual fluorescence reported for N-phenylpyrroles was not observed for 1-3. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11391/1346633
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