Most quadrupolar molecules designed for large two-photon absorption cross section have been shown to undergo symmetry breaking upon excitation to the S state. This was originally deduced from their strong fluorescence solvatochromism and later visualized in real time using transient infrared spectroscopy. For molecules not containing clear IR marker modes, however, a specific real-time observation of the symmetry breaking process remains lacking. Here we show that this process can be resolved using broadband fluorescence upconversion spectroscopy by monitoring the instantaneous emission transition dipole moment. This approach is illustrated with measurements performed on two quadrupolar molecules, with only one of them undergoing excited-state symmetry breaking in polar solvents.
The fluorescence quantum yield of a red naphthalenediimide dye (rNDI) with amino and Br core substituents has been found to decrease by a factor of almost 2 by going from S1 ← S0 to S2 ← S0 excitation. Time-resolved spectroscopic measurements reveal that this deviation from the Kasha-Vavilov's rule is due to an ultrafast, < 200 fs, intersystem-crossing (ISC) from the S2 state to the triplet manifold, due to the ππ* → nπ* character of the transition and to the presence of the heavy Br atom. In non-core substituted naphthalenediimide (pNDI), ISC is slower, ∼2 ps, and was found to be reversible on a time scale shorter than that of vibrational cooling. The fluorescence and triplet quantum yields of rNDI, thus, can be substantially changed by a simple variation of the excitation wavelength.
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