The fate of intermolecular hydrogen bond (H-bond) upon electronic excitation of a H-bonded complex has been debated in literature. For a model H-bonded complex, coumarin 102 (C102)-phenol in a noninteracting solvent ethylene tetrachloride, time-resolved infrared spectroscopy experiment of Nibbering and coworkers suggests that the H-bond between the C102 and phenol ruptures upon electronic excitation (C. Chudoba et al. J. Phys. Chem. A1999, 103, 5625-5628). On the contrary, Zhao and Han have demonstrated for the first time that the intermolecular hydrogen bond is significantly strengthened, while not disrupted, in the electronically excited states of the hydrogen-bonded complexes upon electronic excitation using the time-dependent density functional theory method (G. J. Zhao and K. L. Han J. Phys. Chem. A2007, 111, 2469-2474). The two excited-state hydrogen bonding dynamics mechanisms have widely different predictions of the emission or electronic relaxation of the excited H-bonded complex. The excited-state hydrogen-bond strengthening mechanism proposed by Zhao and Han anticipates a stronger intermolecular interaction, while the H-bond breaking mechanism speculates no interaction between C102 and phenol. The speculation has been tested here on the same system (H-bonded C102-phenol complex) in another noninteracting solvent cyclohexane. We found a strong quenching of the C102 emission in the H-bonded complex. Selectively excited (λex = 405 nm) H-bonded complex relaxes on a fast time scale of 400-600 ps and may be attributed to the conversion of the locally excited (LE) state to a nonfluorescent charge transfer (CT) state assisted by the strong excited-state H-bond formation. A minor component (∼10%) of 2.5 to 1.8 ns is ascribed to the LE complex without a H-bond. The findings are in accordance with the new fluorescence quenching mechanism that the excited-state intermolecular hydrogen bond strengthening facilitates CT from phenol to coumarin in the excited state (G. J. Zhao et al. J. Phys. Chem. B2007, 111, 8940-8945). Fluorescence quenching was absent for anisole, where H-bond formation is not possible and was more pronounced for p-Cl-phenol, where even stronger H-bonding is expected.
Excited state proton transfer (ESPT) of an anionic photoacid 8-hydroxypyrene-1,3,6-trisulfonic acid (HPTS or pyranine) has been studied inside a cationic reverse micelle (RM), water/benzylhexadecyldimethylammonium chloride (BHDC)/benzene, using steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy. The observed ESPT behavior is found to be remarkably different from the known ESPT trend of HPTS inside anionic AOT and cationic CTAB RMs; the ESPT dynamics approaches that of bulk water at higher w0 (≥10) inside AOT RM while no ESPT was observed for CTAB reverse micelle [ Sedgwick J. Am. Chem. Soc. 2012 , 134 , 11904 - 11907 ]. The ESPT dynamics inside BHDC RM is remarkably slower compared to that of water at all w0 (= [water]/[surfactant]) values and relatively much less sensitive to w0 variation compared to AOT RM. 2D NOESY and fluorescence anisotropy measurements reveal that the probe (HPTS) is embedded inside the positive interface of BHDC RM. Despite its trapped location, HPTS is able to undergo ESPT due to significant penetration of water molecules into the interface. Furthermore, facile ESPT at higher w0 is consistent with higher degree of interface hydration as predicted by a recent MD simulation [ Agazzi Langmuir 2014 , 30 , 9643 - 9653 ]. The study shows that ESPT dynamics inside RM varies not only with the interface charge but also on the nature of the headgroup and solvation.
In a neat electron-donating solvent (in this case aniline), photoinduced electron transfer (PET) from the solvent to an excited acceptor (e.g. a coumarin fluorophore) may be anticipated to be the most efficient because of the close contact of the acceptor with many donors. Addition of an inert component would most likely retard the PET process by replacing some donors from the neighbourhood of the acceptors. Surprisingly, we found dramatic acceleration of PET (6-10 fold enhancement compared to neat aniline), for coumarin 102 (C102) dissolved in a binary mixture of aniline and an inert solvent (cyclohexane or toluene). The PET induced fluorescence follows an anomalous trend against the mole fraction of aniline (XAN); first quenches up to certain XAN (0.075 for cyclohexane; 0.13 for toluene), thereafter, enhances with increase in XAN. Although the non-interacting component cannot directly participate in the PET process, it may modulate C102-aniline H-bonding association by changing the polarity of the medium or by disrupting the aniline-aniline H-bond. The study clearly illustrates the dominant role of hydrogen bonding in activating the electron transfer rate where standard thermodynamics predicts very weak donor-acceptor interaction.
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