Issue 7, 2010

On the origin of fluorescence quenching of pyridylindoles by hydroxylic solvents

Abstract

Three isomeric 4′-pyridyl-substituted indoles, with the substituent in positions 2, 3 and 7, reveal strong fluorescence in aprotic solvents, both polar and nonpolar, whereas the emission is strongly quenched in water and alcohol solutions. Both viscosity and alcohol acidity play a role in efficient excited state deactivation. The process becomes faster for more acidic alcohols. It can be slowed down by increasing viscosity, which indicates that the proton movement is accompanied by large amplitude motions in the hydrogen-bonded complex. Quenching is not observed upon formation of solvates in which pyridylindoles act as hydrogen bond donors. The experimental results, combined with calculations can be explained by a model which assumes excited state protonation of the pyridine nitrogen atom, followed by twisting of the pyridyl group, leading to a low-energy structure. An alternative mechanism is also considered, in which the excited state proton transfer is accompanied by electron transfer from water or alcohol into a half-filled orbital of the chromophore, which leads to a conical intersection of the S1 and S0 energy surfaces.

Graphical abstract: On the origin of fluorescence quenching of pyridylindoles by hydroxylic solvents

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
03 Mar 2010
Accepted
01 Apr 2010
First published
05 May 2010

Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2010,9, 923-930

On the origin of fluorescence quenching of pyridylindoles by hydroxylic solvents

V. Vetokhina, M. Kijak, G. Wiosna-Sałyga, R. P. Thummel, J. Herbich and J. Waluk, Photochem. Photobiol. Sci., 2010, 9, 923 DOI: 10.1039/C0PP00043D

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