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Controlling excited-state dynamics protonation of naphthalene-based azo dyes. | LitMetric

Controlling excited-state dynamics protonation of naphthalene-based azo dyes.

Phys Chem Chem Phys

Department of Chemistry, Lehigh University, 6 E. Packer Ave., Bethlehem, PA 18015, USA.

Published: April 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Azo dyes are crucial in chemical research for various industrial applications, and this study examines how protonation affects the photophysics of four naphthalene-based azo dyes.
  • The p value of the dyes increases as the -phenyl substituents become more electron-donating, indicating a correlation with their Hammett parameter.
  • Protonation inhibits the photoisomerization process in the dyes and alters their excited-state dynamics, resulting in shorter lifetimes and lower fluorescence quantum yields compared to their unprotonated forms.

Article Abstract

Azo dyes are a class of photoactive dyes that constitute a major focus of chemical research due to their applications in numerous industrial functions. This work explores the impact of protonation on the photophysics of four naphthalene-based azo dyes. The p value of the dyes increases proportionally with decreasing Hammett parameter of -phenyl substituents from 8.1 (R = -H, = 0) to 10.6 (R = -NMe2, = -0.83) in acetonitrile. Protonation of the dyes shuts down the steady-state photoisomerization observed in the unprotonated moieties. Fluorescence measurements reveal a lower quantum yield with more electron-donating -phenyl substituents, with overall lower fluorescence quantum yields than the unprotonated dyes. Transient absorption spectroscopy reveals four excited-state lifetimes (<1 ps, ∼3 ps, ∼13 ps, and ∼200 ps) exhibiting faster excited-state dynamics than observed in the unprotonated forms (for 1-3: 0.7-1.5 ps, ∼3-4 ps, 20-40 ps, 20-300 min; for 4: 0.7 ps, 4.8 ps, 17.8 ps, 40 ps, 8 min). Time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) elucidates the reason for the loss of isomerization in the protonated dyes, revealing a significant change in the lowest excited state potential energy nature and landscape upon protonation. Protonation impedes relaxation along the typical rotational and inversion isomerization axes, locking the dyes into a -configuration that rapidly decays back to the ground state.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4cp00242cDOI Listing

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