location: Current position: Home >> Scientific Research >> Paper Publications

Thiophene-Inserted Aryl-Dicyanovinyl Compounds: The Second Generation of Fluorescent Molecular Rotors with Significantly Redshifted Emission and Large Stokes Shift

Hits:

Indexed by:期刊论文

Date of Publication:2011-10-01

Journal:EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ORGANIC CHEMISTRY

Included Journals:Scopus、SCIE

Issue:30

Page Number:6100-6109

ISSN No.:1434-193X

Key Words:Cyanides; Fluorescence; Molecular devices; Viscosity; Density functional calculations

Abstract:Fluorescent molecular rotors can be used as molecular sensors for the viscosity of a microenvironment. However, these molecular rotors are limited to 9-(dicyanovinyl) julolidine (DCVJ) and a few derivatives. Furthermore, these traditional rotors show short absorption/emission wavelengths and small Stokes shifts. To address these drawbacks, we have developed a small library of new molecular rotors for viscosity sensing, prepared by incorporating a thiophene unit into the conventional fluorescent molecular rotors with the aim of accessing molecular rotors with redshifted excitation/emission wavelengths and larger Stokes shifts compared with the known rotors. The new rotors show substantially improved photophysical properties. For example, rotor 4 shows absorption/emission wavelengths of 559/697 nm, respectively, and a very large Stokes shift of 138 nm compared with the absorption/emission wavelengths (465/503 nm) and very small Stokes shift (38 nm) of the traditional fluorescent molecular rotor DCVJ. The photophysical properties of the rotors were rationalized by DFT calculations.

Pre One:Room-Temperature Long-Lived (IL)-I-3 Excited State of Rhodamine in an (NN)-N-boolean AND Pt-II Bis(acetylide) Complex with Intense Visible-Light Absorption

Next One:Accessing the long-lived near-IR-emissive triplet excited state in naphthalenediimide with light-harvesting diimine platinum(II) bisacetylide complex and its application for upconversion