The first excited state of conjugated donor-acceptor molecules of C3 symmetry (octupolar molecules) is doubly degenerate. Such a doublet is known to be isomorphic to a spin 1/2. It is shown that a large electric dipole moment is associated with this spin.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn excited centrosymmetric donor-acceptor triads of type A-D-A or D-A-D, symmetry breaking charge transfer (SBCT) in polar media has been explored for a few decades. SBCT is accompanied by significant reorganization of the electronic structure of the molecule, which leads to a change in the fluorescence transition dipole moment (TDM). Previously, experiments revealed a 20%-30% reduction in TDM, which occurs on the timescale of SBCT.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe structure of the energy levels of excited symmetric donor-acceptor octupolar molecules suggests a completely symmetric state and a degenerate doublet. For most molecules, the doublet is the first excited state, which is called the normal level order, but there are molecules with the reverse level order. Symmetry breaking charge transfer (SBCT) and its effect on the transient dipole moment in these structures are studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe effect of a locally excited state on charge transfer symmetry breaking (SBCT) in excited quadrupolar molecules in solutions has been studied. The interaction of a locally excited state and two zwitterionic states is found to either increase or decrease the degree of SBCT depending on the molecular parameters. A strategy on how to adjust the molecular parameters to control the extent of SBCT is presented.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoil salinisation is one of the main abiotic stresses decreasing crop productivity. Here, we show that the plant treatment with iron oxide (Fe3 O4 ) nanoparticles (NPs) may be a promising solution for reducing the negative impact of soil salinity on plant performance. For this purpose, effects of the NPs on growth, photosynthesis, pro-/antioxidant, redox balance and the content of mineral elements in 19-day-old wheat (Triticum aestivum ) plants under soil salinity were studied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe nature of the second excited state in a quadrupolar molecule of the A-D-A structure, where A and D are an electron acceptor and an electron donor, respectively, has been studied. The orthogonality condition of the wave functions requires that the direction of the molecular dipole moment arising due to the charge transfer symmetry breaking be opposite in the first and second excited states. The dipole moment flip leads to large reorganization energy of the solvent upon excited state absorption.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA three-level model of symmetry-breaking charge transfer (SBCT) in excited octupolar molecules is developed. The model describes the joint dynamics of the solvent and the dye in the excited state. For this, a distribution function in the space of two reaction coordinates is introduced.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA model of symmetry breaking (SB) charge separation in symmetric excited dyads and dimers is presented. The minimal model should include at least four basis electronic states due to a small energy gap between the locally excited and charge separated (zwitterionic) states of the chromophores. There are electronic couplings between all these states.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA model of the H-bonding effect on charge transfer symmetry breaking in excited quadrupolar dyes is proposed. A dye is assumed to have two symmetrically arranged H-bond acceptors. The effect of H-bonding is described in terms of two quantities: (i) the free energy of H-bond formation by an excited symmetric dye with a protic solvent and (ii) a parameter that determines the susceptibility of the H-bond strength to the charge of the H-bond acceptor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFManifestations of charge transfer symmetry breaking in excited quadrupolar molecules in optical spectra are theoretically studied. The molecules are supposed to have π-conjugated structures of A-π-D-π-A or D-π-A-π-D character, where electron acceptors (A) or electron donors (D) are identical. A theory describing the effect of symmetry breaking and solvent fluctuations on the dipole moments of optical transitions associated with absorption by a quadrupolar dye in the ground and excited states, as well as fluorescence, is developed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn acridine-dione derivative (3,3,11,11-tetramethyl-8,16-diphenyl-3,4,8,10,11,12,13,16-octahydroacridino[4,3-]acridine-1.9(2,5)dion) with quadrupolar motif has been synthesized and its stationary and transient spectra have been measured. Stationary absorption and fluorescence spectra as well as nonstationary spectra show no signs of symmetry breaking (SB) in aprotic solvents, even of high polarity.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA consistent theory of electron transfer symmetry breaking (SB) dynamics in excited quadrupolar molecules in polar solvents is developed. The interaction of the electronic subsystem of the molecule with intramolecular degrees of freedom and solvent polarization is taken into account and is divided into interaction with inertial and inertialess degrees of freedom. A strong influence of the inertialess polarization of the solvent on the extent of symmetry breaking is revealed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe efficiency of photoinduced charge separation (CS) in electron donor-acceptor compounds is commonly limited due to fast deactivation processes, such as the excited-state internal conversion and ultrafast hot reverse electron transfer to the acceptor, charge recombination (CR). A traditional way to avoid undesired energy losses due to CR is to put the reverse electron transfer into the Marcus inverted region, thus effectively suppressing it. This method, however, is not generally applicable when considering CS from the second locally excited state because the driving force of CR to the first excited state is small, and thus charge recombination is ultrafast and efficient.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFKinetics of photoinduced intramolecular charge separation (CS) and the ensuing ultrafast charge recombination (CR) in electron-donor-acceptor dyads are studied numerically, taking into account the excitation of charge-transfer active intramolecular vibrations and multiple relaxation time scales of the surrounding polar solvent. Both energetic and dynamic properties of intramolecular and solvent reorganization are considered, and their influence on the CS/CR kinetics and quantum yield of ultrafast CS is explored. Particular attention is paid to the energy efficiency of CS, as one of the most important parameters indicating the promise of using a molecular compound as a basis for emerging optoelectronic devices.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFour tetrahedral silicon-centered derivatives of dibenzoylmethanatoboron difluoride (DBMBF ) were synthesized and characterized. Their structural and optical features both in solution and the solid state were investigated by using X-ray crystallography, steady-state and time-dependent spectroscopy, and DFT-based calculations. In dilute solutions, the molar absorption coefficient increases from 40500 to 175200 M cm as the number of DBMBF fragments in a molecule increases from one to four, while, in contrast, the nonradiative rate constant of fluorescence decay decreases from 0.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAt the level of peak powers needed for a Kerr-lens mode-locked operation of solid-state soliton short-pulse lasers, a periodic perturbation induced by spatially localized pulse amplification in a laser cavity can induce soliton instability with respect to resonant dispersive-wave radiation, eventually leading to soliton blowup and pulse splitting of the laser output. Here, we present an experimental study of a high-peak-power self-mode-locking Cr:forsterite laser, showing that, despite its complex, explosion-like buildup dynamics, this soliton blowup can be captured and quantitatively characterized via an accurate cavity-dispersion- and gain-resolved analysis of the laser output. We demonstrate that, with a suitable cavity design and finely tailored balance of gain, dispersion, and nonlinearity, such a laser can be operated in a subcritical mode, right beneath the soliton blowup threshold, providing an efficient source of sub-100-fs 15-20 MHz repetition-rate pulses with energies as high as 33 nJ.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn analytical solution of a three-level model of symmetry breaking in excited A-D-A quadrupolar triads with an electron donor D and identical electron acceptors A and A is derived, in particular, an analytical expression for the dissymmetry parameter (difference in charges, in electron charge units, on the left and right arms of the molecule) is obtained. The model predicts the threshold dependence of the symmetry breaking degree on the parameters of the molecule and its interaction with the solvent. It is shown that for typical molecular parameters, symmetry breaking occurs as a charge transfer from one arm of the molecule to the other with nearly invariable donor charge.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe demonstrate an accurate quantitative characterization of absolute two- and three-photon absorption (2PA and 3PA) action cross sections of a genetically encodable fluorescent marker Sypher3s. Both 2PA and 3PA action cross sections of this marker are found to be remarkably high, enabling high-brightness, cell-specific two- and three-photon fluorescence brain imaging. Brain imaging experiments on sliced samples of rat's cortical areas are presented to demonstrate these imaging modalities.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFNitro derivatives of xanthione, 2,7-dinitro-9 H-xanthene-9-thione and 2,4,7-trinitro-9 H-xanthene-9-thione, have been first synthesized and their stationary and transient spectra have been measured. The stationary spectra show that the attachment of the nitro groups to the xanthione scaffold leads to strong quenching of S → S fluorescence and the decrease of the oscillator strength of the S ← S electronic transition. Analysis of the transient absorption spectra uncovers the ultrafast stimulated emission quenching from the second excited state, S, in the both derivatives.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe dynamics of the ion pairs produced upon fluorescence quenching of the electron donor 9,10-dimethylanthracene (DMeA) by phthalonitrile have been investigated in acetonitrile and tetrahydrofuran using transient absorption spectroscopy. Charge recombination to both the neutral ground state and the triplet excited state of DMeA is observed in both solvents. The relative efficiency of the triplet recombination pathway decreases substantially in the presence of an external magnetic field.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIntraoperative margin assessment of surgical tissues during cancer surgery is clinically important, especially in the case of tissue conserving surgery like Mohs micrographic surgery in which minimization of the surgical area is considered crucial. Frozen pathology is the gold standard of assessing excised tissues for signs of remaining cancerous lesions. The current protocol, however, is time-consuming and labor-intensive.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTo elucidate the regularities inherent in the kinetics of ultrafast charge recombination following photoinduced charge separation in donor-acceptor dyads in solutions, the simulations of the kinetics have been performed within the stochastic multichannel point-transition model. Increasing the solvent relaxation time scales has been shown to strongly vary the dependence of the charge recombination rate constant on the free energy gap. In slow relaxing solvents the non-equilibrium charge recombination occurring in parallel with solvent relaxation is very effective so that the charge recombination terminates at the non-equilibrium stage.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAn approach to the construction of diabatic free energy surfaces (FESs) for ultrafast electron transfer (ET) in a supramolecule with an arbitrary number of electron localization centers (redox sites) is developed, supposing that the reorganization energies for the charge transfers and shifts between all these centers are known. Dimensionality of the coordinate space required for the description of multistage ET in this supramolecular system is shown to be equal to N - 1, where N is the number of the molecular centers involved in the reaction. The proposed algorithm of FES construction employs metric properties of the coordinate space, namely, relation between the solvent reorganization energy and the distance between the two FES minima.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA simple model has been developed to describe the symmetry-breaking of the electronic distribution of A-D-A type molecules in the excited state, where D is an electron donor and A and A are identical acceptors. The origin of this process is usually associated with the interaction between the molecule and the solvent polarization that stabilizes an asymmetric and dipolar state, with a larger charge transfer on one side than on the other. An additional symmetry-breaking mechanism involving the direct Coulomb interaction of the charges on the acceptors is proposed.
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