Molecular Rotors as Fluorescent Viscosity Sensors: Molecular Design, Polarity Sensitivity, Dipole Moments Changes, Screening Solvents, and Deactivation Channel of the Excited States

2011 ◽  
pp. n/a-n/a ◽  
Author(s):  
Fuke Zhou ◽  
Jingyin Shao ◽  
Yubin Yang ◽  
Jianzhang Zhao ◽  
Huimin Guo ◽  
...  
2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yujie Tu ◽  
Junkai Liu ◽  
Haoke Zhang ◽  
Qian Peng ◽  
Jacky W. Y. Lam ◽  
...  

Aggregation-induced emission (AIE) is an unusual photophysical phenomenon and provides an effective and advantageous strategy for the design of highly emissive materials in versatile applications such as sensing, imaging, and theragnosis. "Restriction of intramolecular motion" is the well-recognized working mechanism of AIE and have guided the molecular design of most AIE materials. However, it sometimes fails to be workable to some heteroatom-containing systems. Herein, in this work, we take more than one excited state into account and specify a mechanism –"restriction of access to dark state (RADS)" – to explain the AIE effect of heteroatom-containing molecules. An anthracene-based zinc ion probe named APA is chosen as the model compound, whose weak fluorescence in solution is ascribed to the easy access from the bright (π,π*) state to the closelying dark (n,π*) state caused by the strong vibronic coupling of the two excited states. By either metal complexation or aggregation, the dark state is less accessible due to the restriction of the molecular motion leading to the dark state and elevation of the dark state energy, thus the emission of the bright state is restored. RADS is found to be powerful in elucidating the photophysics of AIE materials with excited states which favor non-radiative decay, including overlap-forbidden states such as (n,π*) and CT states, spin-forbidden triplet states, which commonly exist in heteroatom-containing molecules.


Open Physics ◽  
2008 ◽  
Vol 6 (4) ◽  
Author(s):  
Alexander Rusakov ◽  
André Zaitsevskii

AbstractExcited electronic states of the Au3 cluster are studied within the shape-consistent small-core relativistic pseudopotential model using many-body multipartitioning perturbation theory. Vertical transition energies and dipole moments are evaluated. For highly symmetric isomer, these theoretical results are in reasonable agreement with spectroscopic data from experiments.


1986 ◽  
Vol 41 (3) ◽  
pp. 483-490 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. L. Stiefvater

The earlier prediction of the preferred and the less stable rotameric conformations of isobutyraldehyde, (CH3)2CHCHO, has been confirmed experimentally by microwave spectroscopy. The compound exists mainly in a gauche conformation, in which one of the methyl groups is eclipsed by the oxygen atom, and the less stable rotamer is the trans conformation, in which the oxygen atom eclipses the isopropyl hydrogen.Ground state rotational constants (in MHz) and centrifugal distortion constants (in kHz), together with dipole moments (in D), are:Rotation spectra due to three torsionally excited states of each rotamer have been identified, along with satellites arising from CH3 internal rotation and CC2 wagging.


2014 ◽  
Vol 118 (38) ◽  
pp. 21798-21805 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gil Katz ◽  
Mark A. Ratner ◽  
Ronnie Kosloff

Ab initio molecular-orbital computations with a split-valence 4-31G basis set have been carried out on syn- and antiperiplanar conformers of both HONO and H 3 CONO, and on the transition structures in the unimolecular isomerization process. Calculated values of geometric structural and rotational parameters, dipole moments, wavenumbers of vibrational transitions, energies of vertical electronic transitions to both neutral and ionized excited states, and thermodynamic properties are compared with experimental data; generally good agreement is found. No explanation of the anomalous stability of antiperiplanar HONO has been discovered.


2003 ◽  
Vol 68 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-60 ◽  
Author(s):  
Devarajan Ajitha ◽  
Kimihiko Hirao ◽  
Sourav Pal

Using the Fock space multireference coupled-cluster (FS-MRCC) analytical linear response approach, we report the dipole moments of low-lying singlet and triplet excited states of ozone. The low-lying singlet and triplet excited states are calculated at the ground-state geometry and at the adiabatic geometry for the 1A2 and 1B1. For comparison we also calculate at the ground-state geometry the dipole moments of the 1A2, 1B1 and 1B2 using multireference configuration interaction (MRCI) with a bigger VQZ basis and complete active space. We also report as by-product the excitation energy values in the singles and doubles approximation. At the ground-state geometry we also report the energy and the dipole moments of the 2A1, 2A2 and 2B1 states of the ozone radical cation. The energy of the ozone cation radical is compared with the other correlated approaches. It matches well with the experimental values.


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