Fluorescence Anisotropy Decay of Molecular Rotors with Acene Rotators in Viscous Solution.
2020
Herein, we report the use of fluorescence
anisotropy decay for
measuring the rotation of six shape-persistent molecular rotors with
central naphthalene (2), anthracene (3a, 3b, and 3c), tetracene (4), and
pentacene (5) rotators axially linked by triple bonds
to bulky trialkylsilyl groups of different sizes. Steady-state and
time-resolved polarization measurements carried out in mineral oil
confirmed that the vibrationally resolved lowest-energy absorption
bands are characterized by a transition dipole moment oriented along
the short acene axes, in the direction of the alkyne linkers. Fluorescence
lifetimes increased significantly with increasing acene size and moderately
with a decrease in the size of the trialkylsilyl group. The fluorescence
anisotropy decay for all compounds in mineral oil with a viscosity
of ca. 21.6 cP at 40 °C was completed within the fluorescence
lifetime, so that the rotational time constants could be obtained
via their rotational correlation times, which increased with silyl
protecting group size rather than acene size, indicating that polarization
decay is determined by tumbling of the molecular rotor about the long
acene axis. These results suggest that monitoring the rotational motion
of bis(silylethynyl)acenes in restricted media should be possible
for media with viscosity values on the order of 21.6 cP or greater.
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