4.7 Article

Synthesis and optical properties of linear and branched styrylpyridinium dyes in different environments

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR LIQUIDS
Volume 356, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.molliq.2022.119007

Keywords

Styrylpyridinium dyes; Synthesis; Absorption and emission spectroscopy; Two-photon absorption; Cyclodextrins; Inclusion complexes

Funding

  1. Polish National Science Centre [2018/29/B/ST4/02172]

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A common design motif in organic dye compounds involves the use of an electron donor and acceptor linked by a conjugated bridge. In this study, we synthesized two styrylpyridinium dyes and investigated their photophysical properties. The results showed that the dye structure significantly influenced the absorption and fluorescence properties. Furthermore, the difference in two-photon absorption between the monomer and trimer was larger than expected, and the presence of beta-cyclodextrin led to the formation of inclusion complexes.
A common motif in the design of organic dye compounds is that of an electron donor and an acceptor moiety linked through a conjugated bridge, but more complicated structures can also be built using such motifs as building blocks. Following these principles, we synthesized two styrylpyridinium dyes, a linear one and a branched molecule composed of three units of the mono moiety connected by benzyl group and investigated their photophysical properties in different environments: their linear absorption, one-photon excited fluorescence and two-photon absorption properties. The compound with the symmetrically substituted phenyl core shows a redshift of the absorption and fluorescence bands. Spectrally resolved two-photon absorption cross section measurements carried out by femtosecond Z-scan technique show that the value for the trimer is over twelve times larger than that for the monomer, and not just three times as expected from the molar mass increase. Large two-photon absorption (2PA) values were measured in the near infrared (NIR) region. The prototropic study indicates that the protonation of the amino group blocks a lone pair on the nitrogen atom, making the photoinduced electron transfer process from the amine group to the pyridinium ring ineffective. This results in the reduction of the long-wavelength absorption with a simultaneous increase of the band in the short-wavelength region of the spectrum and a decrease in the fluorescence intensity. The behavior of dyes in the presence of beta-cyclodextrin was also studied based on NMR, UV-Vis, and fluorescence spectroscopy. The performed experiments indicated the formation of 1:1 inclusion complex in aqueous solution. (C) 2022 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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