The family of group XIV rhodamine zwitterions are fluorescence probes with carbon, silicon, germanium, or tin substituted in the 10-position of the xanthene ring. Because of their inherent near-infrared fluorescence, photostability and high quantum yields in aqueous solutions, the Si and Ge containing fluorophores in this class have become increasingly important for fluorescent labeling of proteins and biological molecules. This study fully characterizes photophysical rates derived from a model consisting of a singlet ground state, the lowest singlet excited state, and the lowest triplet excited state for two exemplar group XIV rhodamine zwitterions, one containing Si and the other Ge. Within a simple Jablonski diagram, all radiative and non-radiative rates, including intersystem crossing and triplet depopulation rates, were measured as a function of oxygen concentration. It was shown that the triplet depopulation rates are intrinsically fast in comparison with traditional xanthene containing fluorophores, probably due to the increased spin-obit coupling from the Si and Ge substitution in the xanthene ring. Dissolved oxygen increases both the intersystem crossing and triplet depopulation rates. Stern−Volmer analysis was conducted to estimate rates of quenching by oxygen. The experimental data was used to estimate the initial rates for reactive oxygen production by Si and Ge containing fluorophores in aqueous solutions containing different concentrations of dissolved O 2 . These estimates showed a significantly slower initial rate of reactive oxygen production in comparison with rhodamine 6G. This goes a long way to explaining their inherent photostability. Spectroscopic experiments were also conducted in 77 K viscous aqueous glasses where it was observed that the fluorescence spectra remained unchanged, and the quantum yields increased from 0.53 to 0.84 and from 0.52 to 0.89 for the Si and Ge containing fluorophores respectively; no phosphorescence was observed. All intersystem crossing and triplet depopulation rates were measured using fluorescence correlation spectroscopy (FCS) and analyzed using a new method that extrapolated the power dependence of the FCS curves to optical saturation. This method was verified using published data.
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