Intramolecular
charge transfer and excited-state symmetry breaking
have a significant effect on the nonlinear optical properties of multipolar
chromophores. Rigid and nonplanar perylene bisimide derivatives (PBIs)
functionalized at bay positions were comparatively and comprehensively
investigated. In apolar solvents, two quadrupolar molecular rotors
showed an obvious decrease of the A0‑0/A0‑1 ratios, suggesting strong
exciton coupling with the adjacent PBI units initiated by the π–π
stacking. The vanishment of the preferable dimer emission in polar
solvents supported the plausible phenomena of excited-state symmetry
breaking, thanks to the facile rotation around the rigid linkers.
Comparative femtosecond transition absorption studies confirmed their
notable differences in relaxation dynamics and the generation of radical
anions (PBI•–) and cations (PBI•+). The maxima two-photon absorption (2PA) wavelengths obtained for
the molecular rotors were slightly red-shifted to 670 nm with intrinsic
resonance-enhanced characteristics, reflecting the synergistic effect
of functional positions and molecular architectures. Meanwhile, the
obvious increase of significant 2PA cross-section values in polar
solvents illustrated the stabilization of the symmetry-broken dipolar
states. Further femtosecond Z-scan also manifested the contribution
of excited-state dynamics on the nonlinear optical properties of multipolar
chromophores