Abstract

We report on the rotational diffusion and vibrational population relaxation dynamics of perylene and 1-methylperylene in the primary normal alcohols methanol through n-decanol. The rotational diffusion dynamics of the two chromophores are the same to within the experimental uncertainty for n-propanol through n-decanol. We observe a double exponential decay of the induced orientational anisotropy for 1-methylperylene in all of the alcohols and for perylene in n-propanol through n-decanol. These data are consistent with previous literature reports on perylene in high-viscosity solvents and on 1-methylperylene in n-alkanes longer than n-octane. These data also reveal a substantial difference in the behavior of perylene in n-alkanes and n-alkanols. Both chromophores reorient as oblate rotors in the n-alkanols, with the aspect ratio of the oblate ellipsoid describing their motion depending on the solvent aliphatic chain length. The vibrational population relaxation dynamics of the two probe molecules differ significantly, not only because of the difference in the nature of the solvent−solute coupling but also because of subtle differences in the organization of the solvent around the two chromophores. These data reflect the importance of solvent self-association in determining the local environments of these two chromophores.

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