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Tuning Stilbene Photochemistry by Fluorination: State Reordering Leads to Sudden Polarization near the Franck–Condon Region
Author(s) -
Ilya N. Ioffe,
Martin Quick,
Michael T. Quick,
A. L. Dobryakov,
Celin Richter,
Alex A. Granovsky,
Falko Berndt,
Rainer Mahrwald,
N. P. Érnsting,
Sergey A. Kovalenko
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
journal of the american chemical society
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 7.115
H-Index - 612
eISSN - 1520-5126
pISSN - 0002-7863
DOI - 10.1021/jacs.7b09611
Subject(s) - chemistry , photoexcitation , homo/lumo , time dependent density functional theory , solvatochromism , polarization (electrochemistry) , photochemistry , acetonitrile , polarizability , polar , excitation , excited state , molecular physics , molecule , chemical physics , computational chemistry , atomic physics , density functional theory , physics , organic chemistry , chromatography , astronomy , quantum mechanics
Spontaneous polarization of a nonpolar molecule upon photoexcitation (the sudden polarization effect) earlier discussed for 90°-twisted alkenes is observed and calculated for planar ring-fluorinated stilbenes, trans-2,3,5,6,2',3',5',6'-octofluorostilbene (tF2356) and trans-2,3,4,5,6,2',3',4',5',6'-decafluorostilbene (tF23456). Due to the fluorination, Franck-Condon states S 1 FC and S 2 FC are dominated by the quasi-degenerate HOMO-1 → LUMO and HOMO-2 → LUMO excitations, while their interaction gives rise to a symmetry-broken zwitterionic S 1 state. After optical excitation of tF2356, one observes an ultrafast (∼0.06 ps) evolution that reflects relaxation from initial nonpolar S 3 FC o long-lived (1.3 ns in n-hexane and 3.4 ns in acetonitrile) polar S 1 . The polarity of S 1 is evidenced by a solvatochromic shift of its fluorescence band. The experimental results provide a sensitive test for quantum-chemical calculations. In particular, our calculations agree with the experiment, and raise concerns about the applicability of the common TDDFT approach to relatively simple stilbenic systems.

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