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Solvent‐Dependent C−OH Homolysis and Heterolysis in Electronically Excited 9‐Fluorenol: The Life and Solvation Time of the 9‐Fluorenyl Cation in Water
Author(s) -
Gurzadyan Gagik G.,
Steenken Steen
Publication year - 2001
Publication title -
chemistry – a european journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.687
H-Index - 242
eISSN - 1521-3765
pISSN - 0947-6539
DOI - 10.1002/1521-3765(20010417)7:8<1808::aid-chem18080>3.0.co;2-8
Subject(s) - chemistry , photochemistry , homolysis , heterolysis , solvation , flash photolysis , radical ion , solvent , excited state , bond cleavage , solvolysis , radical , reaction rate constant , ion , organic chemistry , hydrolysis , kinetics , quantum mechanics , nuclear physics , physics , catalysis
The primary pathways of the photodecomposition of 9‐fluorenol (FOH) were studied in polar and nonpolar solvents by use of laser flash‐photolysis with a resolution time of 10 ps. In solvents of high polarity, that is, in 1,1,1,3,3,3‐hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP), 2,2,2‐trifluoroethanol (TFE), formamide or water, the fluorenyl cation, F + , forms by heterolytic C−O bond cleavage. In H 2 O, the initial (10 ps) spectrum of F + has λ max at <460 nm. This absorption red‐shifts with τ =25 ps to the “classical” spectrum with λ max =510–515 nm. This process is assigned to the solvation of the initial “naked” cation, or rather, the contact ion pair. The lifetime of the solvated fluorenyl cation in H 2 O (or D 2 O) and TFE was measured to be τ =20 ps and 1 ns, respectively. In solvents of lower polarity such as alkanes, ethers and alcohols, the long‐lived ( τ 1/2 ≈1 μ s) fluorenyl radical, F . , ( λ max =500 nm) forms through homolytic C−O cleavage. In addition to the radical and the cation, the vibrationally relaxed excited singlet state of FOH is seen with its absorption at ≈640 nm; its lifetime is strongly dependent on the solvent, from 10 ps for formamide to 1.7 ns for cyclohexane. The rate constant for singlet decay increases exponentially with the polarity of the solvent (as expressed by the Dimroth–Reichardt E T value) or with the Gutmann solvent acceptor number. The relaxation of S 1 to S 0 is accompanied by homolytic C9−O bond cleavage (except in HFIP, TFE, and water, where S 1 is not seen).