Abstract

Research in photochemistry is always looking for novel compounds that can serve a role in applications ranging from medicine to environmental science. Push–pull compounds with protonable groups represent an interesting class of molecules in this sense, as they can prove to be sensitive to changes in both the acidity and polarity of the medium, becoming valuable as sensors and probes. Hence, in this work, a new dinitrophenyl-hydrazinylidene derivative with multiple protonable centers has been specifically designed and synthesized. The molecule showed an important acidochromism in the visible, with three differently-protonated species under acidic, neutral, and basic conditions, each characterized by a peculiar absorption spectrum. The photophysical characterization of this compound revealed an ultrafast excited-state deactivation, as described by femtosecond transient absorption experiments, and the hints of charge-transfer dynamics, as supported by the observed solvatochromism and quantum-mechanical calculations. These properties led to almost undetectable fluorescence that, together with negligible intersystem crossing and the absence of reactive pathways, points to the preference for a total non-radiative deactivation mechanism, i.e., internal conversion. This intriguing behavior stimulates interest in light of possible applications of the investigated acidochromic dye as a probe in photoacoustic imaging, which offers an alternative to classical fluorescence imaging.

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