1 research outputs found
Highly Efficient Intramolecular Excimer Formation in a Disulfide-Linked Dipyrenyl Compound: Proton Recognition and Fluidity Assessment
Intramolecular excimer formation
has been utilized extensively
in chemical sciences, especially to probe solvation within complex
media as well as to assess physicochemical properties of the solubilizing
milieu. Pyrene has been employed extensively as a fluorescence probe
for this purpose due to its favorable multidimensional fluorescence
properties. Termini-capped dipyrenyl scaffolds possessing various
functionalities comprise the majority of such compounds. A new both
end-tagged dipyrenyl compound DTP is designed and synthesized,
which exhibits significantly high intramolecular excimer formation
efficiency in polar solvents. The presence of a −NH–(CO)–
and/or −S–S– functionality on the chain linking
the two pyrenyl groups facilitates intramolecular excimer formation.
Excited-state emission intensity decay reveals that the excimer formation
exclusively takes place in the excited state with only one excimer
conformation. The rate constant of excimer formation is found to be
higher for DTP as compared to a similar compound with
an alkyl backbone. The dependence of the excimer formation on the
solvent (protic versus aprotic) as well as on temperature reveals
further insights into the excimer formation process. The excimer formation
by DTP is found to be highly sensitive to the presence
of H+: the relative excimer formation efficiency decreases
drastically in the presence of a small amount of H+ (∼10–5 M). Further, the recognition of protons by DTP via intramolecular excimer formation is also observed
to be highly selective in nature. Based on the observation that both
the excimer formation efficiency and kinetics depend on the viscosity
of the solubilizing milieu, fluidity assessment of the (dimethyl sulfoxide
+ acetonitrile) mixture was carried out using DTP. Further, DTP is found to be an effective probe for the assessment of
the amount of water in the ionic liquid 1-ethyl-3-methylimidazolium bis(trifluoromethylsulfonyl) imide as well as in a deep
eutectic solvent composed of choline chloride and urea in a 1:2 mol
ratio. Highly efficient and rapid intramolecular excimer formation
not only establishes DTP as a useful and versatile probe
but also offers strategic pathways for designing effective excimer-forming
compounds