Abstract

We studied the steady-state fluorescence spectra of solutions of FET (4′-(diethylamino)-3-hydroxyflavone) in acetonitrile that were excited at different temperatures by quanta with different energies located in the range of the main absorption band and in its long-wavelength wing. We found that, at room temperature, the emission intensity ratio of the bands of the normal and tautomeric forms, which are located at 505 and 570 nm, respectively, depends on the excitation wavelength. In the range of the main absorption band 300–360 nm, this ratio remains nearly the same, i.e., 1.45, while, upon excitation in the range of the long-wavelength wing 360–380 nm of the main band, it decreases to 1.33 at a wavelength of 460 nm. In this same range, a long-wavelength excitation effect that is unusual for liquid inviscid solvents at room temperature, i.e., a bathochromic shift of the entire short-wavelength emission band by 11 nm, manifests itself. We propose to explain these dependences using energy diagrams, which take into account the dependence of free energy on the orientational polarization of the polar solvent. The observed effect of the long-wavelength shift of the fluorescence spectrum with increasing excitation wavelength is explained in terms of the inhomogeneous broadening of electronic spectra of polar solutions, and it should be described using the scheme of energy states that takes into account sublevels of orientational broadening due to orientational dipole-dipole interactions of the fluorophore with nearest molecules of the polar solvent, as well as the relation between the fluorophore lifetime in the excited state and the dielectric relaxation time of solvent molecules in the field of the fluorophore dipole.

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