RESUMO
Steady-state and transient absorption spectra with <50 fs time resolution were obtained for two conjugated polymers, both with ≈200 conjugated double bonds (N), constrained in planar, stable, polyene frameworks. Solutions of the polymers exhibit the same S2 â S1 â S* â S0 decay pathway observed for the N = 11-19 polyene oligomers and for zeaxanthin homologues with N = 11-23. Comparisons with the excited state dynamics of polydiactylene and a much longer, more disordered polyene polymer (poly(DEDPM)) show that the S2, S1, and S* lifetimes of the four polymers are almost identical. The S* signals in the polymers are assigned to absorption from vibrationally excited ground states. In spite of significant heterogeneities and variations in conjugation lengths in these long polyenes, their S0 â S2 absorptions are vibronically-resolved in room temperature solutions with electronic origins at ≈600 nm. The limiting wavelength for the S0 â S2 transitions is consistent with the persistence of bond length alternation in the electronic ground states and a HOMO-LUMO band gap in polyenes with N ≈ 200. The coincidence of the well-resolved S0 â S2 electronic origins and the convergence of the excited state lifetimes in the four polymers point to a common, "nearly infinite" polyene limit.
RESUMO
Steady-state and ultrafast transient absorption spectra were obtained for a series of conformationally constrained, isomerically pure polyenes with 5-23 conjugated double bonds (N). These data and fluorescence spectra of the shorter polyenes reveal the N dependence of the energies of six (1)B(u)(+) and two (1)A(g)(-) excited states. The (1)B(u)(+) states converge to a common infinite polyene limit of 15,900 ± 100 cm(-1). The two excited (1)A(g)(-) states, however, exhibit a large (~9000 cm(-1)) energy difference in the infinite polyene limit, in contrast to the common value previously predicted by theory. EOM-CCSD ab initio and MNDO-PSDCI semiempirical MO theories account for the experimental transition energies and intensities. The complex, multistep dynamics of the 1(1)B(u)(+) â 2(1)A(g)(-) â 1(1)A(g)(-) excited state decay pathways as a function of N are compared with kinetic data from several natural and synthetic carotenoids. Distinctive transient absorption signals in the visible region, previously identified with S* states in carotenoids, also are observed for the longer polyenes. Analysis of the lifetimes of the 2(1)A(g)(-) states, using the energy gap law for nonradiative decay, reveals remarkable similarities in the N dependence of the 2(1)A(g)(-) decay kinetics of the carotenoid and polyene systems. These findings are important for understanding the mechanisms by which carotenoids carry out their roles as light-harvesting molecules and photoprotective agents in biological systems.
Assuntos
Elétrons , Polienos/química , Carotenoides/química , Modelos MolecularesRESUMO
Linear oligoenes of 1,6-heptadiynes (derived from dialkyl dipropargylmalonates) with a single basic structure and up to 23 conjugated double bonds were synthesized through Wittig-like reactions between bimetallic Mo-alkylidene compounds and aldehyde-capped oligoenes. The relatively rigid and isomerically pure oligoenes have structures with alternating cis,trans conjugated double bonds in which the cis double bond is part of a cyclopentene ring. Molecular weights have been confirmed through MALDI-MS measurements of samples purified by HPLC. Optical spectra of the purified samples show significant vibronic resolution, even in room temperature samples, and are remarkably similar to those of simple polyenes and carotenoids. Therefore, a systematic investigation of the dependence of the allowed electronic transition energies (electronic origins) on conjugation lengths has become possible. Studies of seven allowed transitions for molecules with 5-23 double bonds (= N) indicate asymptotic convergence (with approximately a 1/N dependence) to a common long polyene limit at approximately 16,000 cm(-1). The convergence of these electronic transitions agrees with theoretical treatments of polyene excited-state energies and is consistent with the absorption spectra of analogous diethyl dipropargylmalonate polymers (1/N approximately 0).
RESUMO
Room temperature absorption and emission spectra of the all-trans isomers of decatetraene, dodecapentaene, tetradecahexaene, and hexadecaheptaene have been obtained in a series of nonpolar solvents. The resolved vibronic features in the optical spectra of these model systems allow the accurate determination of S(0) (1(1)A(g)(-)) --> S(2) (1(1)B(u)(+)) and S(1) (2(1)A(g)(-)) --> S(0) (1(1)A(g)(-)) electronic origins as a function of solvent polarizability. These data can be extrapolated to predict the transition energies in the absence of solvent perturbations. The effects of the terminal methyl substituents on the transition energies also can be estimated. Franck-Condon maxima in the absorption and emission spectra were used to estimate differences between S(0) (1(1)A(g)(-)) --> S(1) (2(1)A(g)(-)) and S(0) (1(1)A(g)(-)) --> S(2) (1(1)B(u)(+)) electronic origins and "vertical" transition energies. Experimental estimates of the vertical transition energies of unsubstituted, all-trans polyenes in vacuum as a function of conjugation length are compared with long-standing multireference configuration interaction (MRCI) treatments and with more recent ab initio calculations of the energies of the 2(1)A(g)(-) (S(1)) and 1(1)B(u)(+) (S(2)) states.
Assuntos
Polienos/química , Absorção , Gases/química , Espectrometria de Fluorescência , TemperaturaRESUMO
The room temperature absorption and emission spectra of the 4-cis and all-trans isomers of 2,4,6,8,10,12,14-hexadecaheptaene are almost identical, exhibiting the characteristic dual emissions S1-->S0 (21Ag- --> 11Ag-) and S2-->S0 (11Bu+ --> 11Ag-) noted in previous studies of intermediate length polyenes and carotenoids. The ratio of the S1-->S0 and S2-->S0 emission yields for the cis isomer increases by a factor of approximately 15 upon cooling to 77 K in n-pentadecane. In contrast, for the trans isomer this ratio shows a 2-fold decrease with decreasing temperature. These results suggest a low barrier for conversion between the 4-cis and all-trans isomers in the S1 state. At 77 K, the cis isomer cannot convert to the more stable all-trans isomer in the 21Ag- state, resulting in the striking increase in its S1-->S0 fluorescence. These experiments imply that the S1 states of longer polyenes have local energy minima, corresponding to a range of conformations and isomers, separated by relatively low (2-4 kcal) barriers. Steady state and time-resolved optical measurements on the S1 states in solution thus may sample a distribution of conformers and geometric isomers, even for samples represented by a single, dominant ground state structure. Complex S1 potential energy surfaces may help explain the complicated S2-->S1 relaxation kinetics of many carotenoids. The finding that fluorescence from linear polyenes is so strongly dependent on molecular symmetry requires a reevaluation of the literature on the radiative properties of all-trans polyenes and carotenoids.
Assuntos
Alcanos/química , Alcenos/química , Cromatografia Líquida de Alta Pressão , Isomerismo , Espectroscopia de Ressonância Magnética , Espectrometria de Fluorescência , TermodinâmicaRESUMO
This paper reports the synthesis of polyene oligomers ("oligoenes") that contain up to 15 double bonds that are identical to the "all five-membered ring" species formed through cyclopolymerization of diisopropyldipropargylmalonate. The oligoenes contain an isopropylidene unit at each end. The isolated oligoenes range from the "dimer" (a pentaene, (E)-di-1,2-[1-(2-methyl-propenyl)-4,4-di-iso-propyl-carboxy-cyclopent-1-enyl]-ethene (3b2)) to the "heptamer" (3b7, a pentadecaene). Oligoenes 3b2, 3b3, 3b4, 3b5, and 3b7 were prepared through Wittig-like reactions between aldehydes and the appropriate monometallic Mo alkylidene or bimetallic Mo bisalkylidene species whose alkylidene is derived from an identical five-membered ring monomeric unit. Compounds 3b2, 3b4, and 3b6 were prepared through McMurry coupling reactions of aldehydes. A representative aldehyde (the "monomeric" aldehyde) is diisopropyl-3-formyl-4-(2-methylprop-1-enyl)cyclopent-3-ene-1,1-dicarboxylate (2b), McMurry coupling of which yields 3b2. A heptaene that contains a six-membered ring in the central unit also was prepared in a Wittig-like reaction involving a bimetallic Mo alkylidene; this species is a model for oligoenes that contain both six-membered and five-membered rings. X-ray structures of two bimetallic species that are employed in the synthesis of the oligoenes are reported.
Assuntos
Alcinos/química , Molibdênio/química , Compostos Organometálicos/química , Polienos/síntese química , Cristalografia por Raios X , Modelos Moleculares , Estrutura Molecular , Compostos Organometálicos/síntese química , Polienos/química , EstereoisomerismoRESUMO
Steady-state absorption and femtosecond time-resolved spectroscopic studies have been carried out on astaxanthin dissolved in CS2, methanol, and acetonitrile, and in purified alpha-crustacyanin. The spectra of the S0 --> S2 and S1 --> S(n) transitions were found to be similarly dependent on solvent environment. The dynamics of the excited-state decay processes were analyzed with both single wavelength and global fitting procedures. In solution, the S1 lifetime of astaxanthin was found to be approximately 5 ps and independent of solvent. In alpha-crustacyanin, the lifetime was noticeably shorter at approximately 1.8 ps. Both fitting procedures led to the conclusion that the lifetime of the S2 state was either comparable to or shorter than the instrument response time. The data support the idea that dimerization of astaxanthin in alpha-crustacyanin is the primary molecular basis for the bathochromic shift of the S0 --> S2 and S1 --> S(n) transitions. Planarization of the astaxanthin molecule, which leads to a longer effective pi-electron conjugated chain and a lower S1 energy, accounts for the shorter tau1 in the protein.
Assuntos
Proteínas de Transporte , Animais , Nephropidae/química , Soluções , Espectrofotometria , Fatores de Tempo , Xantofilas/químicaRESUMO
We have developed procedures for synthesizing dimethyl polyenes using living polymerization techniques and have initiated investigations of the spectroscopic properties of these molecules. Purification using high-performance liquid chromatography (HPLC) of the polyene mixtures resulting from the syntheses promises to provide all-trans polyenes with a wide range in the number of conjugated double bonds. Low temperature optical measurements on these model systems, both in glasses and in n-alkane mixed crystals, yield absorption and fluorescence spectra with considerably higher vibronic resolution than the spectra currently available for carotenoids with comparable conjugation lengths. The dimethyl polyenes thus allow a more precise exploration of the electronic properties of long, linearly conjugated systems. These studies can be used to verify the existence of low-lying singlet states predicted by theory and recently invoked to explain low-resolution fluorescence, Raman excitation spectra, and the transient absorption spectroscopy of carotenoids. Steady state and time-resolved optical studies of the dimethyl series will be used to better understand the energies and dynamics of the low energy electronic states relevant to the photochemistry and photobiology of all linearly conjugated systems.