A family of (ferrocenyl)indenes, (2-ferrocenyl)indene, (2-ferrocenyl)tetramethylindene, (2-ferrocenyl)hexamethylindene, (3-ferrocenyl)indene, and (3-ferrocenyl)hexamethylindene, and the corresponding
monooxidized cations have been prepared. The results of a structural and spectroelectrochemical study
are discussed. The availability of pairs of isomers with known geometries and differently methylated
indenes allowed the detailed investigation of how slight geometric and electronic modifications affect
their physical properties. The molecular structures have been determined by X-ray diffraction and compared
with the fully optimized structures calculated with state-of-the-art DFT methods. Calculated and
crystallographic structures agree in establishing the dependence of the orientation of the indene moiety
and the ferrocenyl cyclopentadienyl rings on the degree of methylation. The UV−vis spectra and in
particular the appearance upon oxidation of a new near-IR absorption, whose energy and intensity increase
with the degree of methylation and cyclopentadienyl-indene planarity, are rationalized in the framework
of the Hush theory and at quantum chemistry level by DFT and TD-DFT calculations.
We report on the first observation of reverse saturable absorption by ferrocene (Fc) in toluene using nanosecond pulses at 532 nm. Pump and probe experiments in the visible spectral region show the existence of an excited triplet state with an intersystem crossing quantum yield S1 --> T1 of 0.085 and a molar extinction coefficient epsilon(Fc)(T) of 5650 L mol(-1) cm(-1) at 700 nm. The full understanding of the nonlinear optical behavior of Fc cannot be obtained, however, with a model that includes only the one-photon absorption from T1, but it is mandatory to consider also a simultaneous two-photon absorption from an excited singlet state of Fc (two-photon absorption cross section: 2.4 x 10(-41) cm4 s ph(-1) mol(-1)). The optical spectrum of the ground and triplet state of Fc are calculated within a TD-DFT approach considering several functionals (PBE, BLYP, LDA, OPBE) for the optimization of molecular geometry.
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