Abstract

Covalently tethered bichromophores provide an ideal proving ground to develop strategies for controlling excited state behavior in chromophore assemblies. In this work, optical spectroscopy and electronic structure theory are combined to demonstrate that the oxidation state of a sulfur linker between anthracene chromophores gives control over not only the photophysics but also the photochemistry of the molecules. Altering the oxidation state of the sulfur linker does not change the geometry between chromophores, allowing electronic effects between chromophores to be isolated. Previously, we showed that excitonic states in sulfur-bridged terthiophene dimers were modulated by electronic screening of the sulfur lone pairs, but that the sulfur orbitals were not directly involved in these states. In the bridged anthracene dimers that are the subject of the current paper, the atomic orbitals of the unoxidized S linker can actively mix with the anthracene molecular orbitals to form new electronic states with enhanced charge transfer character, different excitonic coupling, and rapid (sub-nanosecond) intersystem crossing that depends on solvent polarity. However, the fully oxidized SO2 bridge restores purely through-space electronic coupling between anthracene chromophores and inhibits intersystem crossing. Photoexcitation leads to either internal conversion on a sub-20 picosecond timescale, or to the creation of a long-lived emissive state that is the likely precursor of the intramolecular [4 + 4] photodimerization. These results illustrate how chemical modification of a single atom in the covalent bridge can dramatically alter not only the photophysics but also the photochemistry of molecules.

Highlights

  • IntroductionOne of the most important scienti c questions regarding covalent bichromophores concerns the role of the linker

  • The application of conjugated organic molecules in solar energy conversion and electroluminescence requires the development of complex chromophores and control of their assembly

  • Our results suggest that electronic state engineering, which can be accomplished by changing the chemical structure of a single atom in the assembly, provides a new chemical strategy for controlling the photochemical behavior of covalent molecular assemblies

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Summary

Introduction

One of the most important scienti c questions regarding covalent bichromophores concerns the role of the linker. At the start of this study, we expected that the role of the oxidation state of the bridging S atom would be similar to that in the terthiophene bichromophores, where the bridge lone pair orbitals modulate the electronic interactions between the An chromophores without participating in the electronic states. Intramolecular reactivity in covalent anthracene assemblies is usually assumed to be completely controlled by steric effects and geometry, for example through the topochemical principle.[49,50,51,52,53] Our results suggest that electronic state engineering, which can be accomplished by changing the chemical structure of a single atom in the assembly, provides a new chemical strategy for controlling the photochemical behavior of covalent molecular assemblies.

Results and discussion
Steady-state spectroscopy
Excited state dynamics of An–S–Ph and An–S–An
Excited state dynamics of An–SO2–Ph and An–SO2–An
Theoretical analysis
Conclusions
Full Text
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