The electronic properties
of amide linkers, which are intricate
components of biomolecules, offer a wealth of unexplored possibilities.
Herein, we demonstrate how the different modes of attaching an amide
to a pyrene chromophore affect the electrochemical and optical properties
of the chromophore. Thus, although they cause minimal spectral shifts,
amide substituents can improve either the electron-accepting or electron-donating
capabilities of pyrene. Specifically, inversion of the amide orientation
shifts the reduction potentials by 200 mV. These trends indicate that,
although amides affect to a similar extent the energies of the ground
and singlet excited states of pyrene, the effects on the doublet states
of its radical ions are distinctly different. This behavior reflects
the unusually strong orientation dependence of the resonance effects
of amide substituents, which should extend to amide substituents on
other types of chromophores in general. These results represent an
example where the Hammett sigma constants fail to predict substituent
effects on electrochemical properties. On the other hand, Swain–Lupton
parameters are found to be in good agreement with the observed trends.
Examination of the frontier orbitals of the pyrene derivatives and
their components reveals the underlying reason for the observed amide
effects on the electronic properties of this polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon
and points to key molecular-design strategies for electronic and energy-conversion
systems.