1 research outputs found
Excited-State Dynamics of an Environment-Sensitive Push–Pull Diketopyrrolopyrrole: Major Differences between the Bulk Solution Phase and the Dodecane/Water Interface
The
excited-state dynamics of a diketopyrrolopyrrole (DPP) derivative
with push–pull substituents has been investigated in a variety
of solvents and at the dodecane/water and dodecane/heavy-water interfaces
using a combination of ultrafast spectroscopic techniques, including
transient electronic absorption and time-resolved surface second-harmonic
generation. Whereas the photophysics of a nonpolar DPP analogue is
mostly independent of the solvent, the fluorescence decay of the push–pull
DPP accelerates strongly by going from aprotic to protic solvents.
As this effect increases with the polarity and the hydrogen-bond-donating
ability of the solvent, it is attributed to the occurrence of H-bond-assisted
nonradiative deactivation induced by the charge-transfer character
of the excited state that favors the coupling of the molecule to the
H-bond network of the solvent. At the dodecane/water interface, the
excited-state lifetime is longer by a factor of ca. 20 than that estimated
in pure water and increases further by a factor of about 3 when going
to the dodecane/heavy-water interface. This isotope effect, that is
more than twice as strong as that measured in bulk solutions, and
molecular dynamic simulations indicate that the slowing down of the
dynamics at the interface cannot be solely ascribed to a reduced accessibility
of the DPP molecule to the aqueous phase. The slower excited-state
decay is rather assigned to the conjunction of several effects, such
as the strengthening of the H-bond network formed by the interfacial
water molecules and the lower local polarity of the interfacial region