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1.
Chemphyschem ; 22(17): 1738-1744, 2021 Sep 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34245095

ABSTRACT

Emissive properties for the cationic exciplex (A+ */D→A. D.+ ) of an isoquinolinium cation tethered to a substituted arene (1+ ) are strongly affected by hydrogen bonding solvents. At equal dielectric constant (ϵ), the ground-to-excited state energy gaps (ΔG) and solvent reorganization energies (λs ) decrease from nitriles to aliphatic alcohols. The corresponding decrease from aliphatic alcohols to high hydrogen bond acidity solvents is ∼3 times larger. The exciplex decay (kEx ), largely determined by unfolding of the exciplex to a stretched conformer, changes in a complex way depending on the strength of the hydrogen bond ability of these solvents. In contrast, the electronic couplings between the exciplex ground, excited, and charge transfer states do not show a solvent functionality dependence.

2.
J Org Chem ; 86(11): 7508-7514, 2021 06 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34033720

ABSTRACT

Nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy was used to generate ethoxyl radicals and demonstrate that they react with 2,6-lutidine and 4-phenylpyridine to give the corresponding N-hydropyridinyl radicals-products of a novel hydrogen atom transfer from the alkoxyl radical to the nitrogen atom of the substituted pyridines. Nanosecond kinetics show that both reactions are rapid (k ∼ 107 M-1 s-1) in acetonitrile at room temperature. Rate constants measured for reaction of the ethoxyl vs. d5-ethoxyl radical with 2,6-lutidine and 4-phenylpyridine show that both reactions exhibit primary H/D kinetic isotope effects for the hydrogen (deuterium) atom transfer reactions.


Subject(s)
Alcohols , Hydrogen , Free Radicals , Kinetics , Pyridines
3.
J Org Chem ; 85(13): 8639-8644, 2020 07 02.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32530642

ABSTRACT

Aryltrimethylgermane cation radicals were generated by nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Transient kinetics experiments show that the aryltrimethylgermane cation radicals react with added nucleophiles in reactions that are first-order in both the cation radicals and the nucleophiles. Preparative photo-oxidation experiments demonstrate that the intermediate cation radicals react with nucleophiles, resulting in aryl-Ge or Me-Ge nucleophile-assisted fragmentations. The aryltrimethylgermane cation radicals were found to react more slowly than analogous stannane cation radicals; however, loss of the thermodynamically disfavored aryl radicals remains competitive with methyl radical loss.

4.
J Phys Chem A ; 124(19): 3730-3737, 2020 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32369702

ABSTRACT

Conventional exciplexes are products of excited-state charge generation reactions between neutral reactants (e.g., A* + D → A•-D•+), whereas cationic exciplexes are products of charge shift reactions of cations with neutral donors (e.g., A+* + D → A•D•+). Compared herein is the solvent-dependent fluorescence of a cationic exciplex with extant data for conventional exciplexes. Although linear correlations of conventional exciplex emission maxima with the Lippert-Mataga solvent polarity function are well documented in low to moderate polarity solvents, the correlations are often poor in more polar solvents. A number of such plots in moderate to high polarity solvents show a strong curvature. Intriguingly, for these same cases, plots of emission maxima versus the solvent dielectric constant (ε) are remarkably linear. Interestingly, emission maxima for the cationic exciplex of 1+ in nitrile and alcohol solvents also correlate linearly with ε. The solvent dependency for cationic exciplex emission maxima on ε is ca 1/3 of that for conventional exciplexes, which is ascribed to solvent stabilization of both the excited state and the ground state for cationic exciplexes. Differences in exciplex emissions between nitrile and alcohol solvents for 1+ are attributed to hydrogen bonding, with larger differences in higher hydrogen-bond acidity solvents.

5.
J Org Chem ; 84(12): 7840-7850, 2019 Jun 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31181903

ABSTRACT

Unlike numerous known examples of exciplexes (products of charge formation reactions), we reported recently that cationic exciplexes (products of charge shift reactions) can be formed with N-methylisoquinolinium as an excited acceptor and alkyl benzene donors. We have now synthesized five intramolecular analogues (isoquinolinium linked by a trimethylene tether to alkyl benzenes) that proved to be well suited to demonstrating that emissive exciplexes can be formed in water from purely organic components. Three conformers (anti, gauche, and folded) leading to electron transfer were identified using a combination of absorption spectroscopy, fluorometry, and time-correlated single photon counting. The hydrophobicity of the donor moiety was found to enhance the formation of the folded conformer, which leads directly to exciplex formation. Electronic coupling matrix elements between ground, charge-transfer, and locally excited states were determined from correlations between radiative rate constants and average emission frequencies. The charge transfer (CT) character of the exciplexes (88-97%) was calculated from the electronic coupling. In spite of such a high CT character in a highly polar solvent, exciplex fluorescence quantum yields up to 0.03 and lifetimes up to 17 ns were observed.

6.
J Org Chem ; 82(23): 12112-12118, 2017 12 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29094591

ABSTRACT

Benzyltrialkylgermane cation radicals were generated and spectroscopically characterized by nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. The germane cation radicals were found to rapidly react with nucleophiles (e.g., alcohols) in reactions that were first-order in cation radical and first-order in nucleophile. The geometries of the transition states for nucleophilic substitutions on benzyl-silane and -germane cation radicals were investigated by using the endocyclic restriction test. Cation radicals containing tethered nucleophiles that required endocyclic transition states with small angles between the bond being formed to the nucleophilic atom and the bond to the leaving group reacted ∼250 times more slowly than cation radicals with tethered nucleophiles where a large bond angle can be accommodated. The results are consistent with the nucleophile-assisted fragmentations proceeding through an inversion transition state.

7.
J Phys Chem A ; 121(41): 7903-7909, 2017 Oct 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28991475

ABSTRACT

Of the many known examples of exciplexes, those formed from bimolecular encounter between a cationic, excited state electron acceptor and a neutral donor in fluid media have not been previously reported. We now show that emissive exciplexes formed from excited N-methyl isoquinolinium cation (NMiQ+) with alkyl benzene donors are readily detected in acetonitrile. These cationic exciplexes result in a charge shift (A+* + D → A•D•+) with no net change in charge, which differs fundamentally from the charge-generation of conventional exciplex formation (A* + D → A•-D•+). We find that cationic and conventional exciplexes show similar trends, e.g., bathochromic shifts and decreases in fluorescence quantum yields with decreasing oxidation potentials of the donors. In the presented examples of NMiQ+ exciplexes, the fluorescence quantum yield decreases by a factor of 30 and the radiative rate constant by 6.6 as the fractional CT character of the exciplex increases from ∼0.79 to ∼0.95. Interestingly, the electronic coupling matrix elements for the NMiQ+ exciplexes, derived from a correlation of the radiative rate constants with the average emission frequencies, are similar to those of related conventional exciplexes, in spite of the absence of Coulombic stabilization in the cationic exciplexes.

8.
J Org Chem ; 82(20): 11052-11055, 2017 10 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29016139

ABSTRACT

The aryl/methyl fragmentation selectivities for the photooxidations of phenyltrimethylstannane and (4-methylphenyl)trimethylstannane by 1,2,4,5-tetracyanobenzene in acetonitrile were found to depend on the codonor used to generate the stannane cation radical intermediates. The aryl/methyl fragmentation selectivities for phenyltrimethylstannane and (4-methylphenyl)trimethylstannane varied by factors of 26 and 5.6, respectively, depending on the structures of the codonors. The fragmentation selectivities could be correlated with the oxidation potentials of the codonors and their steric bulk. The results can be interpreted by the intermediacy of heterodimer cation radicals formed between the stannane cation radicals and the neutral codonors, which thereby affect the fragmentation selectivities.

9.
J Phys Chem A ; 121(19): 3662-3670, 2017 05 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28475349

ABSTRACT

Exciplexes of 2,6,9,10-tetracyanoanthracene (TCA) with alkylbenzenes were investigated in solvents ranging from cyclohexane to acetonitrile. Plots of the reduced emission maxima or the average emission frequency (hνav) versus redox potential differences (Eredox) were linear with a slope of ∼1 in all solvents, which is consistent with the highly ionic character of the exciplexes. The exciplex spectra were analyzed in terms of the energy gap between the exciplex minimum and the AD pair (ΔG), the energy difference between ΔG and Eredox (δEx), and the total reorganization energy (Σλ). A plot of (Eredox - hνav), equivalent to (Σλ - δEx), versus a solvent polarity function showed a linear dependency for the low-to-moderate polarity solvents, whereas highly polar solvents deviated significantly. δEx showed a smooth linear dependency for all solvents. Thus, the deviation of the polar solvents is due to a larger-than-expected Σλ. Additionally, the full width at half-maximum (fwhm) of the emission spectra in polar solvents deviates significantly from the extrapolated trend in less-polar solvents. The deviations of Σλ and fwhm in highly polar solvents can plausibly be explained by composite emissions from two exciplex structures, with the donor overlapping with the inner or outer ring of TCA.

10.
J Org Chem ; 80(18): 9240-6, 2015 Sep 18.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26332071

ABSTRACT

Aryltrialkylstannane cation radicals were generated and characterized by nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Kinetics show the fragmentations of the stannane cation radicals occur by a bimolecular, nucleophile-assisted mechanism (S(N)2). Consistent with this hypothesis, steric effects on both the nucleophile and the stannane cation radicals were observed. Steady-state, preparative photooxidation experiments show that aryltrimethylstannane cation radicals have an unusual preference for loss of aryl radicals over methyl radicals and that the selectivity for aryl vs methyl radical loss is dependent on the identity of the nucleophile. The preference for loss of aryl radicals is rationalized by a hypothesis based on Bent's rules.

11.
Photochem Photobiol ; 91(3): 624-36, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25363042

ABSTRACT

Exciplexes of 9,10-dicyanoanthracene (DCA) with alkylbenzene donors in cyclohexane show structureless emission spectra, typical of exciplexes with predominantly charge-transfer (CT) character, when the donor has a relatively low oxidation potential (Eox ), e.g. hexamethylbenzene (HMB). With increasing Eox and stronger mixing with a locally excited (LE) state, vibrational structure begins to appear with 1,2,3,5-tetramethylbenzene and becomes prominent with p-xylene (p-Xy). A simple theoretical model reproduces the spectra and the radiative rate constants, and it reveals several surprises: Even in this nonpolar solvent, the fractional CT character of a highly mixed exciplex varies widely in response to fluctuations in the microscopic environment. Environments that favor the LE (or CT) state contribute more to the blue (or red) side of the overall spectrum. It is known that sparsely substituted benzene radical cations, e.g., p-Xy(•+) , are stabilized more in acetonitrile than the heavily substituted HMB(•+) . Remarkably, ion pairing with DCA(•-) in cyclohexane leads to even larger differences in the stabilization of these radical cations. The spectra of the low-Eox donors are almost identical except for displacements that approximately equal the differences in Eox , even though the exciplexes have varying degrees of CT character. These similarities result from compensation among several nonobvious, but quantified factors.

12.
J Org Chem ; 79(19): 9297-304, 2014 10 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25184671

ABSTRACT

The redox equilibrium method was used to determine accurate oxidation potentials in acetonitrile for 40 heteroatom-substituted compounds. These include methoxy-substituted benzenes and biphenyls, aromatic amines, and substituted acetanilides. The redox equilibrium method allowed oxidation potentials to be determined with high precision (≤ ±6 mV). Whereas most of the relative oxidation potentials follow well-established chemical trends, interestingly, the oxidation potentials of substituted N-methylacetanilides were found to be higher than those of the corresponding acetanilides. Density functional theory calculations provided insight into the origin of these surprising results in terms of the preferred conformations of the amides versus their cation radicals.

13.
J Chem Theory Comput ; 9(5): 2276-85, 2013 May 14.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26583721

ABSTRACT

The nature of the multicenter, long bond in ditetracyanoethylene dianion complex [TCNE]2(2-) is elucidated using high level ab initio Valence Bond (VB) theory coupled with Quantum Monte Carlo (QMC) methods. This dimer is the prototype of the general family of pancake-bonded dimers with large interplanar separations. Quantitative results obtained with a compact wave function in terms of only six VB structures match the reference CCSD(T) bonding energies. Analysis of the VB wave function shows that the weights of the VB structures are not compatible with a covalent bond between the π* orbitals of the fragments. On the other hand, these weights are consistent with a simple picture in terms of two resonating bonding schemes, one displaying a pair of interfragment three-electron σ bonds and the other displaying intrafragment three-electron π bonds. This simple picture explains at once (1) the long interfragment bond length, which is independent of the countercations but typical of three-electron (3-e) CC σ bonds, (2) the interfragment orbital overlaps which are very close to the theoretical optimal overlap of 1/6 for a 3-e σ bond, and (3) the unusual importance of dynamic correlation, which is precisely the main bonding component of 3-e bonds. Moreover, it is shown that the [TCNE]2(2-) system is topologically equivalent to the square C4H4(2-) dianion, a well-established aromatic system. To better understand the role of the cyano substituents, the unsubstituted diethylenic Na(+)2[C2H4]2(2-) complex is studied and shown to be only metastable and topologically equivalent to a rectangular C4H4(2-) dianion, devoid of aromaticity.

14.
J Org Chem ; 78(5): 1955-64, 2013 Mar 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23181705

ABSTRACT

Photoinduced electron transfer to N-alkoxypyridiniums, which leads to N­O bond cleavage and alkoxyl radical formation, is highly chain amplified in the presence of a pyridine base such as lutidine. Density functional theory calculations support a mechanism in which the alkoxyl radicals react with lutidine via proton-coupled electron transfer (PCET) to produce lutidinyl radicals (BH•). A strong electron donor, BH• is proposed to reduce another alkoxypyridinium cation, leading to chain amplification, with quantum yields approaching 200. Kinetic data and calculations support the formation of a second, stronger reducing agent: a hydrogen-bonded complex between BH• and another base molecule (BH•···B). Global fitting of the quantum yield data for the reactions of four pyridinium salts (4-phenyl and 4-cyano with N-methoxy and N-ethoxy substituents) led to a consistent set of kinetic parameters. The chain nature of the reaction allowed rate constants to be determined from steady-state kinetics and independently determined chain-termination rate constants. The rate constant of the reaction of CH3O• with lutidine to form BH•, k1, is ~6 × 10(6) M(­1) s(­1); that of CH3CH2O• is ~9 times larger. Reaction of CD3O• showed a deuterium isotope effect of ~6.5. Replacing lutidine by 3-chloropyridine, a weaker base, decreases k1 by a factor of ~400.


Subject(s)
Alcohols/chemistry , Cations/chemistry , Pyridines/chemistry , Pyridinium Compounds/chemistry , Hydrogen Bonding , Molecular Structure , Photochemical Processes
15.
J Org Chem ; 77(4): 1632-9, 2012 Feb 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22283183

ABSTRACT

As we reported recently, endergonic to mildly exergonic electron transfer between neutral aromatics (benzenes and biphenyls) and their radical cations in acetonitrile follows a Sandros-Boltzmann (SB) dependency on the reaction free energy (ΔG); i.e., the rate constant is proportional to 1/[1 + exp(ΔG/RT)]. We now report deviations from this dependency when one reactant is sterically crowded: 1,4-di-tert-butylbenzene (C1), 1,3,5-tri-tert-butylbenzene (C2), or hexaethylbenzene (C3). Obvious deviation from SB behavior is observed with C1. Stronger deviation is observed with the more crowded C2 and C3, where steric hindrance increases the interplanar separation at contact by ~1 Å, significantly decreasing the π orbital overlap. Consequently, electron transfer (k(et)) within the contact pair becomes slower than diffusional separation (k(-d)), causing deviation from the SB dependency, especially near ΔG = 0. Fitting the data to a standard electron-transfer theory gives small matrix elements (~5-7 meV) and reasonable reorganization energies. A small systematic difference between reactions of C3 with benzenes vs biphenyls is rationalized in terms of small differences in the electron-transfer parameters that are consistent with previous data. The influence of solvent viscosity on the competition between k(et) and k(-d) was investigated by comparing reactions in acetonitrile and propylene carbonate.

16.
J Am Chem Soc ; 133(30): 11580-7, 2011 Aug 03.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21736293

ABSTRACT

In a landmark publication over 40 years ago, Rehm and Weller (RW) showed that the electron transfer quenching constants for excited-state molecules in acetonitrile could be correlated with the excited-state energies and the redox potentials of the electron donors and acceptors. The correlation was interpreted in terms of electron transfer between the molecules in the encounter pair (A*/D ⇌ A(•-)/D(•+) for acceptor A and donor D) and expressed by a semiempirical formula relating the quenching constant, k(q), to the free energy of reaction, ΔG. We have reinvestigated the mechanism for many Rehm and Weller reactions in the endergonic or weakly exergonic regions. We find they are not simple electron transfer processes. Rather, they involve exciplexes as the dominant, kinetically and spectroscopically observable intermediate. Thus, the Rehm-Weller formula rests on an incorrect mechanism. We have remeasured k(q) for many of these reactions and also reevaluated the ΔG values using accurately determined redox potentials and revised excitation energies. We found significant discrepancies in both ΔG and k(q), including A*/D pairs at high endergonicity that did not exhibit any quenching. The revised data were found to obey the Sandros-Boltzmann (SB) equation k(q) = k(lim)/[1 + exp[(ΔG + s)/RT]]. This behavior is attributed to rapid interconversion among the encounter pairs and the exciplex (A*/D ⇌ exciplex ⇌ A(•-)/D(•+)). The quantity k(lim) represents approximately the diffusion-limited rate constant, and s the free energy difference between the radical ion encounter pair and the free radical ions (A(•-)/D(•+) vs A(•-) + D(•+)). The shift relative to ΔG for the overall reaction is positive, s = 0.06 eV, rather than the negative value of -0.06 eV assumed by RW. The positive value of s involves the poorer solvation of A(•-)/D(•+) relative to the free A(•-) + D(•+), which opposes the Coulombic stabilization of A(•-)/D(•+). The SB equation does not involve the microscopic rate constants for interconversion among the encounter pairs and the exciplex. Data that fit this equation contain no information about such rate constants except that they are faster than dissociation of the encounter pairs to (re-)form the corresponding free species (A* + D or A(•-) + D(•+)). All of the present conclusions agree with our recent results for quenching of excited cyanoaromatic acceptors by aromatic donors, with the two data sets showing indistinguishable dependencies of k(q) on ΔG.

17.
J Am Chem Soc ; 133(13): 4791-801, 2011 Apr 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21384880

ABSTRACT

Rate constants (k) for exergonic and endergonic electron-transfer reactions of equilibrating radical cations (A(•+) + B ⇌ A + B(•+)) in acetonitrile could be fit well by a simple Sandros-Boltzmann (SB) function of the reaction free energy (ΔG) having a plateau with a limiting rate constant k(lim) in the exergonic region, followed, near the thermoneutral point, by a steep drop in log k vs ΔG with a slope of 1/RT. Similar behavior was observed for another charge shift reaction, the electron-transfer quenching of excited pyrylium cations (P(+)*) by neutral donors (P(+)* + D → P(•) + D(•+)). In this case, SB dependence was observed when the logarithm of the quenching constant (log k(q)) was plotted vs ΔG + s, where the shift term, s, equals +0.08 eV and ΔG is the free energy change for the net reaction (E(redox) - E(excit)). The shift term is attributed to partial desolvation of the radical cation in the product encounter pair (P(•)/D(•+)), which raises its free energy relative to the free species. Remarkably, electron-transfer quenching of neutral reactants (A* + D → A(•-) + D(•+)) using excited cyanoaromatic acceptors and aromatic hydrocarbon donors was also found to follow an SB dependence of log k(q) on ΔG, with a positive s, +0.06 eV. This positive shift contrasts with the long-accepted prediction of a negative value, -0.06 eV, for the free energy of an A(•-)/D(•+) encounter pair relative to the free radical ions. That prediction incorporated only a Coulombic stabilization of the A(•-)/D(•+) encounter pair relative to the free radical ions. In contrast, the results presented here show that the positive value of s indicates a decrease in solvent stabilization of the A(•-)/D(•+) encounter pair, which outweighs Coulombic stabilization in acetonitrile. These quenching reactions are proposed to proceed via rapidly interconverting encounter pairs with an exciplex as intermediate, A*/D ⇌ exciplex ⇌ A(•-)/D(•+). Weak exciplex fluorescence was observed in each case. For several reactions in the endergonic region, rate constants for the reversible formation and decay of the exciplexes were determined using time-correlated single-photon counting. The quenching constants derived from the transient kinetics agreed well with those from the conventional Stern-Volmer plots. For excited-state electron-transfer processes, caution is required in correlating quenching constants vs reaction free energies when ΔG exceeds ∼+0.1 eV. Beyond this point, additional exciplex deactivation pathways-fluorescence, intersystem crossing, and nonradiative decay-are likely to dominate, resulting in a change in mechanism.


Subject(s)
Pyrans/chemistry , Thermodynamics , Electron Transport , Molecular Structure
18.
J Org Chem ; 75(10): 3326-31, 2010 May 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20405871

ABSTRACT

Nanosecond laser flash photolysis methods were used to generate and spectrally characterize the cation radicals of 1,2-diaryl-1,1,2,2,-tetramethyldisilanes (Ar = p-X-Ph, X = H, CH(3), OCH(3)) in hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP) at room temperature. The disilane cation radicals rapidly reacted with methanol, with bimolecular rate constants ranging from 0.63 to 2.1 x 10(8) M(-1) s(-1). The cation radicals were found to react with tert-butanol 4-5 times more slowly than methanol, consistent with a small steric effect for nucleophile-assisted fragmentation of the Si-Si bond. The standard potentials for oxidation of the disilanes in HFIP were determined by two different methods: first, by measuring equilibrium constants for electron exchange between the disilanes and the cation radical of hexaethylbenzene and, second, by combining electrochemical data from cyclic voltammetry with the lifetimes of the disilane cation radicals measured by laser flash photolysis in the same media. Agreement between the two methods was excellent (

Subject(s)
Silanes/chemistry , Silanes/chemical synthesis , Cations/chemical synthesis , Cations/chemistry , Electrochemistry , Free Radicals/chemical synthesis , Free Radicals/chemistry , Molecular Structure , Stereoisomerism
19.
J Org Chem ; 74(15): 5163-73, 2009 Aug 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-19588891

ABSTRACT

Nanosecond transient absorption methods were used to determine accurate oxidation potentials (E(ox)) in acetonitrile for benzene and a number of its alkyl-substituted derivatives. E(ox) values were obtained from a combination of equilibrium electron-transfer measurements and electron-transfer kinetics of radical cations produced from pairs of benzene and biphenyl derivatives, with one member of the pair acting as a reference. Using a redox-ladder approach, thermodynamic oxidation potentials were determined for 21 benzene and biphenyl derivatives. Of particular interest, E(ox) values of 2.48 +/- 0.03 and 2.26 +/- 0.02 V vs SCE were obtained for benzene and toluene, respectively. Because of a significant increase in solvent stabilization of the radical cations with decreasing alkyl substitution, the difference between ionization and oxidation potentials of benzene is approximately 0.5 eV larger than that of hexamethylbenzene. Oxidation potentials of the biphenyl derivatives show an excellent correlation with substituent sigma+ values, which allows E(ox) predictions for other biphenyl derivatives. Significant dimer radical cation formation was observed in several cases and equilibrium constants for dimerization were determined. Methodologies are described for determining accurate electron-transfer equilibrium constants even when dimer radical cations are formed. Additional equilibrium measurements in trifluoroacetic acid, methylene chloride, and ethyl acetate demonstrated that solvation differences can substantially alter and even reverse relative E(ox) values.

20.
J Phys Chem A ; 112(43): 10790-800, 2008 Oct 30.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18834093

ABSTRACT

With the judicious selection of triplet energy donor (D) and acceptor (A) pairs, a laser flash photolysis procedure has provided a sensitive method for the study of triplet energy transfer in rigid polymer films. By monitoring changes in triplet-triplet (T-T) absorptions the kinetics of triplet energy transfer were evaluated at short time scales, and overall energy-transfer quantum yields were also obtained. Combinations of xanthone- or thioxanthone-type donors and polyphenyl acceptors were particularly suited to these measurements because the former have high intersystem-crossing quantum yields and the latter have very high extinction coefficients for T-T absorption. For exothermic transfer most of the energy transfer that occurred within the lifetime of triplet D ( (3)D) took place in less than a few microseconds after (3)D formation in poly(methyl methacrylate), and triplet A yields were limited largely by the number of A molecules in near contact with (3)D. The kinetics of triplet energy transfer were modeled using a modified Perrin-type statistical arrangement of D/A separations with allowance for excluded volume in combination with a Dexter-type formula for the distance-dependent exchange energy-transfer rate constant. Experimental observations were best explained by constraining D/A separations to reflect the dimensions of intervening molecules of the medium. Rate constants, k 0, for exothermic energy transfer from (3)D to A molecules in physical contact are approximately 10 (11) s (-1) and very similar to triplet energy-transfer rate constants determined from solution encounters. Energy-transfer rate constants, k( r), fall off as approximately exp(-2 r/ 0.85), where r is the separation distance between D and A centers in angstroms. Exchange energy transfer is not restricted to (3)D and A in physical contact, but at

Subject(s)
Energy Transfer , Membranes, Artificial , Models, Chemical , Polymethyl Methacrylate/chemistry , Quantum Theory , Kinetics , Lasers , Molecular Structure , Photolysis , Thermodynamics , Time Factors , Xanthones/chemistry
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