Icosahedral carboranes, CBH, have long been considered to be aromatic but the extent of conjugation between these clusters and their substituents is still being debated. m- and p-Carboranes are compared with m- and p-phenylenes as conjugated bridges in optical functional chromophores with a donor and an acceptor as substituents here. The absorption and fluorescence data for both carboranes from experimental techniques (including femtosecond transient absorption, time-resolved fluorescence and broadband fluorescence upconversion) show that the absorption and emission processes involve strong intramolecular charge transfer between the donor and acceptor substituents via the carborane cluster.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe study focuses on the structural and photophysical characteristics of neutral and oxidized forms of N-tolanyl-phenochalcogenazines PZX-tolan with X=O, S, Se, and Te. X-ray crystal structure analyses show a pseudo-equatorial (pe) structure of the tolan substituent in the O, S, and Se dyads, while the Te dyad possesses a pseudo-axial (pa) structure. DFT calculations suggest the pe structure for O and S, and the pa structure for Se and Te as stable forms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWhile spin-orbit coupling does not play a decisive role in the photophysics of unsubstituted perylene diimides (PDI), this changes dramatically when two phenylselenyl or phenyltelluryl substituents were attached to the PDI bay positions. In the series of PhO-, PhS-, PhSe-, and PhTe-substituted PDIs we observed strongly decreasing fluorescence quantum yield as a consequence of strongly increasing intersystem crossing (ISC) rate, measured by transient absorption spectroscopy with fs- and ns-time resolution as well as by broadband fluorescence upconversion. Time-dependent density functional calculations suggest increasing spin-orbit coupling due to the internal heavy-atom effect as the reason for fast ISC.
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