4.7 Article

On the origin of ultrafast nonradiative transitions in nitro-polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons: Excited-state dynamics in 1-nitronaphthalene

Journal

JOURNAL OF CHEMICAL PHYSICS
Volume 131, Issue 22, Pages -

Publisher

AMER INST PHYSICS
DOI: 10.1063/1.3272536

Keywords

charge exchange; dark states; density functional theory; dissociation; excited states; fluorescence; Franck-Condon factors; nonradiative transitions; organic compounds; oscillator strengths; photochemistry; reaction kinetics theory; solvation; spectrochemical analysis; vibrational states

Funding

  1. ACS Petroleum Research

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The electronic energy relaxation of 1-nitronaphthalene was studied in nonpolar, aprotic, and protic solvents in the time window from femtoseconds to microseconds. Excitation at 340 or 360 nm populates the Franck-Condon S-1(pi pi(*)) state, which is proposed to bifurcate into two essentially barrierless nonradiative decay channels with sub-200 fs lifetimes. The first main decay channel connects the S-1 state with a receiver T-n state that has considerable n pi(*) character. The receiver T-n state undergoes internal conversion to populate the vibrationally excited T-1(pi pi(*)) state in 2-4 ps. It is shown that vibrational cooling dynamics in the T-1 state depends on the solvent used, with average lifetimes in the range from 6 to 12 ps. Furthermore, solvation dynamics competes effectively with vibrational cooling in the triplet manifold in primary alcohols. The relaxed T-1 state undergoes intersystem crossing back to the ground state within a few microseconds in N-2-saturated solutions in all the solvents studied. The second minor channel involves conformational relaxation of the bright S-1 state (primarily rotation of the NO2-group) to populate a dissociative singlet state with significant charge-transfer character and negligible oscillator strength. This dissociative channel is proposed to be responsible for the observed photochemistry in 1-nitronaphthalene. Ground- and excited-state calculations at the density functional level of theory that include bulk and explicit solvent effects lend support to the proposed mechanism where the fluorescent S-1 state decays rapidly and irreversibly to dark excited states. A four-state kinetic model is proposed that satisfactorily explains the origin of the nonradiative electronic relaxation pathways in 1-nitronaphthalene.

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