scholarly journals Molecular Rotor based on an Oxidized Resorcinarene

Author(s):  
Daniel T. Payne ◽  
Jan Labuta ◽  
Zdenĕk Futera ◽  
Václav Březina ◽  
Lenka Hanyková ◽  
...  

Molecular single stator-double rotor activity of an oxidized resorcinarene (fuchsonarene) macrocycle containing unsaturated hemiquinonoid groups at its meso positions was investigated. Fuchsonarenes containing two hemiquinonoid substituents at diagonally-opposed meso-positions with two electron rich phenol groups at the remaining meso-positions between the hemiquinonoid groups. All meso-substituents are in proximity at one side of the resorcinarene macrocycle (so-called rccc-type isomer) with rotational activity of the phenol meso-substituents. Rotation rates of the phenol moieties can be controlled by varying temperature, solvent polarity and acidity of the medium of study with rotation being thermally activated in neutral and acidic media and tunable in the range from 2 s-1 to 20,000 s-1. Experimental and computational data indicate that rotation of the mobile phenol meso-substituents is remotely affected by interactions with acidic solvents at the carbonyl C=O groups of macrocyclic acetyloxy groups, which occurs with the emergence of a lower energy electronic absorption band whose intensity is correlated with both the acidity of the medium and the rotation rate of the phenol substituents. Time-dependent DFT calculations suggest that the low energy band is due to a molecular conformational adjustment affecting electronic conjugation caused by strong interaction of macrocyclic acetyloxy carbonyl groups with the acid medium. The work presents a molecular mechanical model for estimating solution acidity and also gives insight into a possible method for modulating rotor activity in molecular machines.

1987 ◽  
Vol 40 (12) ◽  
pp. 1923 ◽  
Author(s):  
ID Rae ◽  
ID Rae ◽  
A Staffa ◽  
A Staffa ◽  
AC Diz ◽  
...  

In order to obtain a deeper insight into the title effect, several compounds with an F atom very close to a C-H of a nearby functional group were synthesized and the relevant couplings measured. The most conspicuous case was that of 8-fluoro-2-hydroxynaphthalene-1-carbaldehyde where a close proximity between the F and H atoms is the result of fluorine-oxygen repulsion and the formation of an intramolecular hydrogen bond between the hydroxyl and carbonyl groups. The experimental four-bond J(F,CHO) coupling is 26.2 Hz. A compound very similar to this one, but without the OH group, was chosen on which to perform a polarization propagator analysis of the through-space (TS) coupling pathways, at the RPA-INDO level. The expression for the TS coupling in terms of the projected polarization propagator and perturbators was numerically analysed. It is found that this coupling is completely dominated by a TS component of the Fermi contact (FC) term, the main features of which are: ( i ) It decays exponentially with the F-H distance; (ii) Its main contribution comes from an electron excitation involving the F lone-pair, the C-H bond of the CHO moiety and its corresponding antibonding orbital;(iii) The π-type lone-pair does not contribute to the TS coupling pathway of the FC term.


Author(s):  
Sushant Murudkar ◽  
Aruna K. Mora ◽  
Sujana Jakka ◽  
Prabhat K. Singh ◽  
Sukhendu Nath

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shiv Kumar ◽  
Pauline Tourneur ◽  
Jonathan Adsetts ◽  
Michael Wong ◽  
Pachaiyappan Rajamalli ◽  
...  

Aiming to develop efficient blue-emitting thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) compounds, we have designed and synthesized derivatives of the well-known sky-blue emitter 2CzPN that contain electron-accepting phosphine chalcogenide groups to stabilize the HOMO level relative to the pristine compound, thus increasing the HOMO-LUMO gap and blue-shifting the emission wavelength. By cyclic voltammetry, photophysical data and quantum-chemical calculations, it was found that polar solvents and matrices validated the proposed concept, but these trends were not recovered in non-polar media. The suitability of these 2CzPN derivatives in polar matrices for optoelectronic applications was explored with electrochemiluminescence (ECL) by measuring emission delays, radical stability, emission stabilities, emission efficiencies and emission spectra. Some of the 2CzPN derivatives showed an unprecedented delayed onset of the ECL, and delayed rising time to the ECL maximum, as well as long ECL emission decay. All of these mentioned delay times suggest that these luminophores primarily emit via organic long-persistent electrochemiluminescence (OLECL) mechanisms. The derivatization of the donor groups of the emitters affected both the radical stability and the predominant emission mechanism, providing important insight into their potential as emitters in solid-state electroluminescent devices.


2005 ◽  
Vol 83 (9) ◽  
pp. 1207-1211 ◽  
Author(s):  
Edward M Kosower

Observations made in the course of experiments on pyridinium salts led to important discoveries in physical organic chemistry. The way in which the discoveries were made is likened to art rather than goal-directed "cold logic". We can describe the art of discovery as an effort enhanced by practice and intuition to recognize novelty in a finding and provide productive insight into its nature. We shall present some examples, and describe what happened after finding an unexpected light absorption band, a surprising solvent effect on spectra, and an unexpectedly stable and beautiful small organic radical.Key words: art of discovery, solvent polarity parameter, charge-transfer complex, stable free radical, solvent effect on spectra.


2019 ◽  
Vol 25 (1) ◽  
pp. 93-104 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ulrike I. Kramm ◽  
Irmgard Abs-Wurmbach ◽  
Sebastian Fiechter ◽  
Iris Herrmann ◽  
Jörg Radnik ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 18 (29) ◽  
pp. 19955-19965 ◽  
Author(s):  
Tapabrata Dam ◽  
Sidhartha S. Jena ◽  
Dillip K. Pradhan

An insight into thermally activated ion-hopping, relaxation dynamics and the coupled ion-conduction mechanism observed in ion-conducting polymer clay composites.


2017 ◽  
Vol 139 (4) ◽  
pp. 1699-1704 ◽  
Author(s):  
Koen Vandewal ◽  
Johannes Benduhn ◽  
Karl Sebastian Schellhammer ◽  
Tim Vangerven ◽  
Janna E. Rückert ◽  
...  

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