Abstract

Effect of solvent polarity and hydrogen bonding interaction on the excited state dynamics of 9-Anthracenecarboxaldehyde (9-ACD) have been investigated using steady state and time-resolved electronic and vibrational spectroscopic techniques. Photophysical properties and dynamics of the excited states are seen to be more sensitive to intermolecular hydrogen bonding ability of the solvent, rather than its polarity. FTIR studies reveal formation of complexes with the protic solvents via formation of conventional hydrogen bond at the carbonyl site of 9-ACD molecule. In strong hydrogen bond donating solvents, namely, 2, 2, 2-trifuoroethanol (TFE) and 1, 1, 1, 3, 3, 3-hexafluoroisopropanol (HFIP), nearly all the molecules of 9-ACD in solution remain engaged in complex formation leaving insignificant number of molecules remaining free in solution. In aprotic solvents, the S1 state is short-lived (the lifetime is only a few tens of ps) and intersystem crossing (ISC) is the major deactivation pathway (the triplet yield is near unity). However, in strong hydrogen bond donating solvents, the S1 state lifetime is long (a few ns) because the deactivation pathway for the S1 state via the triplet manifold is blocked. Both the ultrafast time-resolved electronic and vibrational spectroscopy studies in TFE and HFIP reveal that hydrogen bond reorganization process following photoexcitation of the hydrogen bonded complex is the only relaxation process undergone by the S1 state in sub-100 ps time domain. However, the time-resolved IR (TRIR) spectroscopy studies further reveal the possibility of formation of aromatic π- hydrogen bonding and reorganization of the hydrogen bond at this site makes the major contribution towards the S1 state relaxation process in strong hydrogen bond donating solvents.

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