Kais
Dhbaibi
ah,
Ludovic
Favereau
*a,
Monika
Srebro-Hooper
*b,
Cassandre
Quinton
a,
Nicolas
Vanthuyne
c,
Lorenzo
Arrico
d,
Thierry
Roisnel
a,
Bassem
Jamoussi
e,
Cyril
Poriel
a,
Clément
Cabanetos
f,
Jochen
Autschbach
g and
Jeanne
Crassous
*a
aUniv Rennes, CNRS, ISCR – UMR 6226, ScanMAT – UMS 2001, F-35000 Rennes, France. E-mail: ludovic.favereau@univ-rennes1.fr; jeanne.crassous@univ-rennes1.fr
bFaculty of Chemistry, Jagiellonian University, Gronostajowa 2, 30-387 Krakow, Poland. E-mail: srebro@chemia.uj.edu.pl
cAix Marseille University, CNRS, Centrale Marseille, iSm2, Marseille, France
dDipartimento di Chimica e Chimica Industriale, University of Pisa, via Moruzzi 13, 56124, Pisa, Italy
eDepartment of Environmental Sciences, Faculty of Meteorology, Environment and Arid Land Agriculture, King Abdulaziz University, 21589 Jeddah, Saudi Arabia
fMOLTECH-Anjou, CNRS UMR 6200, University of Angers, 2 Bd Lavoisier, 49045 Angers, France
gDepartment of Chemistry, University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, NY 14260, USA
hUniversity of Gabès, Faculty of Science of Gabès, Zrig, 6072 Gabès, Tunisia
First published on 20th November 2019
π-Helical push–pull dyes were prepared and their (chir)optical properties were investigated both experimentally and computationally. Specific fluorescent behaviour of bis-substituted system was observed with unprecedented solvent effect on the intensity of circularly polarized luminescence (CPL, dissymmetry factor decreasing from 10−2 to 10−3 with an increase in solvent polarity) that was linked to a change in symmetry of chiral excited state and suppression of interbranched exciton coupling. The results highlight the potential of CPL spectroscopy to study and provide a deeper understanding of electronic photophysical processes in chiral π-conjugated molecules.
To investigate this hitherto unexplored aspect of CPL, we focus our attention on π-helical push–pull systems such as the newly synthesized mono-naphthalimide helicene 1 and the bis-naphthalimide helicene 2, previously used in organic photovoltaic devices (Fig. 1).3l These are ideal candidates to explore innovative CPL-emitter designs based on intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) transitions owing to the electron donor and electron acceptor abilities of the helicene and naphthalimide fragments, respectively.9 As we report herein, the chiral multipolar acceptor (A)–π–donor (D) 1 and A–π–D–π–A 2 derivatives exhibit intense electronic circular dichroism (ECD) responses in the visible spectral region along with high fluorescence quantum yields and intense CPL signals, up to 80% and glum = 10−2, respectively. Interestingly, while both compounds show similar solvatochromism, only 2 displays a modulation of CPL intensity with an increase in solvent polarity, showing the importance of the branching effect in such chiral push–pull dyes. The specific emission behaviour of 2vs. 1 was rationalized based on both experimental and computational characterizations, and related mainly to a change in symmetry of the emitting S1 state and suppression of exciton coupling between individual helicene → naphthalimide ICT transitions upon increasing the polarity of the environment.
Fig. 1 Chemical structures of chiral A–π–D P-1 and A–π–D–π–A P-2 with schematic representations of the local and total permanent electric dipole moments μ. TMS: trimethylsilyl, C6H13: n-hexyl. |
Characteristic signatures of both the [6]helicene and naphthalimide units were identified in the 1H NMR spectra of 1 and 2, which also showed the typical differences between C1- and C2-symmetric structures with two distinct signals (doublet of doublets) at 7.56 and 7.28 ppm assigned to H3 and H14 (Fig. 1) for 1 and only one signal (doublet) at 7.29 ppm for these protons in 2 (see also ESI†). Single crystals of P-2 were obtained by slow diffusion of pentane vapours into CH2Cl2 solution. The compound crystallized in the non-centrosymmetric monoclinic P21 space group and displayed helicity (dihedral angle between the two terminal helicenic rings) of 37.77–47.91° (two molecules in the asymmetric unit), which is in the range of classical carbo[6]helicenes.9d Both naphthalimide fragments are oriented towards the helix, (i.e. with the aromatic ring not directly linked with the ethynyl bridge being in cis position with respect to the helicene) and show a dihedral angle of 7.2° with the corresponding terminal helicene phenyl ring. This should ensure a strong electronic communication between the two units (vide infra). The angle between each naphthalimide-ethynyl arms was estimated to be around 120° (Scheme 1) and allows to consider 2 as a quasi-quadrupolar A–π–D–π–A chiral compound.
Fig. 2 (Panel a) Experimental UV-vis (top) and ECD (bottom) spectra of 1 (dashed lines) and 2 (solid lines) measured in cyclohexane (black), CH2Cl2 (blue) and DMF (red) at 298 K (∼10−5 M). (Panel b) Comparison of the simulated UV-vis and ECD spectra of 1 and 2 with H6(TMS)2 and NPhBr. No spectral shift has been applied. Calculated excitation energies along with oscillator and rotatory strengths indicated as ‘stick’ spectra. Numbered excitations (N1 for 1 and N2 for 2) correspond to those analyzed in detail. Isosurfaces (±0.03 au) of frontier MOs of 1 and 2. Values listed in the parentheses are the corresponding orbital energies, in eV. See also ESI.† |
Further characterizations of the electronic and photophysical properties of 1 and 2 were then obtained with the help of quantum-chemical calculations for truncated systems (with n-hexyl groups replaced by methyls) using (time-dependent) Kohn–Sham theory, (TD)KS = (TD)DFT.12 All computational details along with the full set of theoretical results are provided in the ESI.† Conformational analyses (BP/SV(P)) performed for 1 and 2 revealed existence of two and three low-energy nearly isoenergetic conformers, respectively, that can be thus assumed to be present roughly in equal amounts at room temperature. These rotamer structures differ in the relative orientations of the naphthalimide group(s) and the helicene moiety (Fig. S18†) but demonstrate overall very similar electronic features with (i) the dipolar A–π–D and pseudo-quadrupolar A–π–D–π–A character for 1 and 2, respectively, and (ii) efficient π-conjugation between electron acceptor naphthalimide group(s) and electron donor helicene moiety via the alkynyl bridge in both 1 and 2. Indeed, calculated electronic dipole moment vectors in 1 and 2 are oriented as expected for the dipolar and pseudo-quadrupolar structures (Fig. S28 and S29†). Moreover, the frontier molecular orbitals (MOs) in 1 and 2 are consistent with the push–pull character of the dyes. Indeed, the occupied MOs span over the whole helicene fragment, the ethynyl bridges and partially also naphthalimide units, while the unoccupied ones are predominantly centered at the naphthalimide fragments but also delocalized over the adjacent helicene's rings via the alkynyl (Fig. 2b and ESI†). The simulated (BHLYP/SV(P), CH2Cl2 continuum solvent model), Boltzmann-averaged UV-vis absorption spectra (Fig. 2b) are in good agreement with the experimental ones (Fig. 2a). In particular, the appearance of the additional low-energy absorption bands in naphthalimide–helicene derivatives compared to their precursors H6(TMS)2 and NPhBr along with the significant increase in the absorption intensity observed for 2vs.1 are correctly reproduced by theory and linked to push–pull character of the dyes. In line with the A–π–D and A–π–D–π–A electronic structures of 1 and 2, an MO-pair analysis of the dominant excitations calculated in the low-energy spectral regions assigns the additional absorption at 420 nm in 1 and 2 to mainly intramolecular charge-transfer π–π* excitations from the helicene core to the naphthalimide group(s). In the case of 1, the band originates from the lowest-energy excitation no. 11 (calculated at 405 nm) that involves HOMO, HOMO−2 and LUMO (Fig. 2b and ESI†). For 2, two excitations with sizeable oscillator strength were found in this spectral range, no. 12 and 22 calculated at 411 and 395 nm, respectively, that correspond to transitions from HOMO, HOMO−1, and HOMO−2 to LUMO and LUMO+1. Note that for both 1 and 2 occupied MOs involved in these excitations represent distinct π-orbitals of the alkynyl-helicene electron system with some contributions from the naphthalimide, while unoccupied MOs mainly extend over the naphthalimide-alkynyl group with LUMO and LUMO+1 in 2 representing in-phase and out-of-phase linear combinations of the naphthalimide substituents' LUMO. Accordingly, increase in the intensity of the band for 2 is due to exciton-coupling (EC) interactions between these ICT states, similar to what we previously noticed for push–pull helicenic systems based on strongly electron acceptor tetracyanobutadienes.13 Visible helicene → naphthalimide charge-transfer character can also be noticed for higher-energy excitations including those calculated around 300–330 nm with large contributions from the helicene-centered π–π* transitions (see ESI†). All this clearly supports the conclusions drawn from experimental optical observations.
Similarly to UV-vis absorption, changing the solvent polarity has rather minor effect on ECD spectra for both 1 and 2, except for non-polar cyclohexane in which a 5 nm blue-shift of two lowest-energy bands along with their intensity increase were observed relative to peaks measured in more polar solvents (e.g. for P-2, Δε = +260 and +450 M−1 cm−1 at 404 and 426 nm, respectively, Fig. 2a, S10 and S11†). To provide a more quantitative characterization of the solvent effects for the examined systems, dissymmetry factors gabs for all the studied solvents were then calculated and plotted (Fig. S12 and S13†). Their values range from 3.8 × 10−3 to 4.5 × 10−3 for P-1 and from 7.0 × 10−3 to 9.5 × 10−3 for P-2 at ca. 430 nm, which confirms the small impact of the polarity of the environment on the chiroptical ground-state responses of P-1 and P-2. This is in line with the dipole moments calculated for both 1 (of 7–8 D) and 2 (of 6.5–7.5 D) that maintain the same spatial orientation and demonstrate only slight increase in magnitude with increase in the solvent polarity (Table S13 and Fig. S29†). Note also that among computationally examined solvents (cyclohexane, CH2Cl2, and DMF) the most pronounced change in the ground-state dipole moments of 1 and 2 upon increase in the solvent polarity is observed for cyclohexane vs. dichloromethane that may rationalize the most significant differences between spectra recorded in cyclohexane and those measured in remaining (more polar) solvents.
As shown in Fig. 2 and ESI,† the simulated (BHLYP/SV(P), CH2Cl2 continuum solvent model) ECD spectra of P-1 and P-2 agree well with the experimental results. In particular, the calculations correctly reproduced (i) the presence of positive ECD signal in the spectral region where the parent helicene absorbs, i.e. around 325 nm, for both P-1 and P-2, with a decrease in the signal's intensity for the latter compound, and (ii) the appearance of low-energy intense positive ECD band along with its red-shift and strong increase in intensity for P-2vs. P-1. As expected and aforementioned above, the former band indeed originates from the predominantly helicene-centered π–π* excitations (no. 41 computed at 333 nm and 61 at 314 nm for 1 and no. 92 at 304 nm for 2 in Fig. 2b, see also ESI†) that involve, however, also ICT transitions from the helicene's π-electron system to the naphthalimide group(s), whereas the low-energy band is attributed to intense lowest-energy excitation (no. 11 (405 nm) and 12 (411 nm)) of purely helicene → naphthalimide ICT character. In the case of 2, this first excitation is accompanied by analogous helicene → naphthalimide ICT excitation no. 22 (395 nm) that reveals similar energy along with comparable, although opposite-sign, rotatory strength value. In consequence, the appearance of a strong bisignate pair of bands in the low-energy part of the computed ECD spectrum of 2 is observed. The bisignate signature and significant enhancement of the long-wavelength ECD intensity for 2vs.1 along with the donor → acceptor ICT character of underlying excitations clearly resemble the case of helicene–TCBD derivatives, and based on its analysis presented in ref. 13, the ECD-intense low-energy excitations of 2, 12 and 22, can also be treated as the exciton couplet arising from coupling between transitions from helicene's π-orbitals to the π*-orbital localized at either one of the naphthalimide groups. The effect is clearly enhanced with respect to TCBD-functionalized helicenes which may be due to a more efficient π-conjugation between electron acceptor substituents and helicene moiety occurring in 2 promoted by highly conjugated and aromatic structure of the naphthalimide dye. The intensity of the band originating from the negative couplet component for P-2 appears to be additionally increased by a presence of excitation no. 62 (333 nm) that also reveals sizable negative rotatory strength value, which may be responsible for the substantial overestimation of the calculated ECD response at around 350 nm for this compound compared to the experimental results. Furthermore, it is worth noting that the experimental intensity of this band (see Fig. S11†) seems to decrease with the polarity of the solvent which may indicate suppression of exciton-coupling interactions between the ICT states in 2 in polar solvents.
(1) |
(2) |
Solvent | D–π–A 1 | A–π–D–π–A 2 | ||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
λ abs (nm) | λ em (nm) | Δνa (cm−1) | ϕ fluo (%) | τ fluo (ns) | |glum| (×10−3) | λ abs (nm) | λ em (nm) | Δνa (cm−1) | ϕ fluo (%) | )τFluoc (ns] | |glum| (×10−3) | |
a Stokes shift. b Absolute quantum yield (error ± 10%), measured using an integrating sphere. c Fluorescence lifetime (error ± 5%), only the main component decay is given (weight in parenthesis). | ||||||||||||
CyH | 420 | 436 | 870 | 70 | 2.1 | 3.2 | 420 | 436 | 1030 | 45 | 2.4 (91%) | 9.5 |
Tol | 428 | 457 | 1480 | 85 | 3.4 | 2.4 | 430 | 453 | 1180 | 65 | 2.8 | 6.5 |
THF | 424 | 503 | 3700 | 80 | 4.4 | 2.0 | 423 | 497 | 3520 | 75 | 4.3 | 4.0 |
CHCl3 | 431 | 509 | 3560 | 80 | 4.0 | 2.0 | 432 | 503 | 3270 | 70 | 4.2 | 4.0 |
CH2Cl2 | 427 | 527 | 4440 | 75 | 4.7 | 1.8 | 427 | 520 | 4000 | 70 | 4.3 (96%) | 3.1 |
Acetone | 424 | 548 | 5340 | 65 | 5.7 | 1.8 | 429 | 539 | 4790 | 60 | 5.7 | 2.8 |
DMF | 427 | 576 | 6060 | 55 | 6.2 | 1.8 | 433 | 562 | 5450 | 55 | 6.3 (97%) | 2.5 |
Fig. 3 (Panel a) Emission of 2 in cyclohexane (black), toluene (purple), THF (sky blue), CHCl3 (pink), CH2Cl2 (blue), acetone (yellow), and DMF (red) at 298 K (∼10−5 M). (Panel b) Lippert–Mataga plots for 1 (dotted line) and 2 (solid line) (see also Table S12†). (Panel c) Difference density between the S0 ground state and S1 excited state, Δρ = ρg − ρe, color-mapped on ρg (±0.0003 au) for 1 and 2 in cyclohexane and DMF. Alongside, the corresponding S1 excited-state dipole moment vectors (with origin located at the center of nuclear charge, scaled by a factor of 0.5, pointing from the negative to the positive pole of the dipole) are shown. TDDFT BHLYP/SV(P) continuum solvent model calculations. See also ESI.† |
These results indicate that the observed spectral shifts in solution are determined by dipole–dipole type interactions between the helical fluorophore and solvent molecules rather than by specific solute–solvent interactions such as hydrogen bonding. More interesting, the plots show nearly identical behaviour with large and similar slope values for both 1 and 2 suggesting that fluorescence in these compounds stems from an excited state of essentially the same electronic nature and is accompanied by large values of the effective dipole moment change Δμeg (Table S12†). Such large slopes appear to reflect relatively small Stokes shifts of 1 and 2 in cyclohexane and toluene, which, along with the structured luminescence profile and the symmetry observed between the absorption and emission spectra, suggests a smaller reorganization before emission in non-polar solvents (i.e. weaker charge-transfer character of S1 excited states) for these systems. Further luminescence characterizations, including fluorescence quantum yields (ϕfluo) and lifetime decays measurements, also confirm a similar photophysical behaviour of 1 and 2 (Table 1). Namely, both compounds display moderate to intense emission efficiencies in the different solvents with ϕfluo up to 85% and 75% for 1 and 2, respectively. Fluorescence lifetimes of 1 and 2 increase from ca. 2.5 ns in cyclohexane to 6.3 ns in DMF, which also evidence the impact of polarity on the charge-transfer excited-state dynamics.
All these experimental observations are well corroborated by TDDFT emission modeling employing state-specific solvation for cyclohexane (ε = 2.0), CH2Cl2 (ε = 8.9), and DMF (ε = 37.2) (see Computational details in the ESI†). The calculations nicely reproduced the solvent-dependent fluorescence behaviour of 1 and 2 with theoretical emission maxima very close to the experimental ones (Tables S10 and S11†). Values of the computed S1 electronic dipole moments visibly increase with the solvent polarity, from ca. 16 and 13 D in cyclohexane to 24 and 21 D in DMF for 1 and 2, respectively, and are strongly enhanced (ca. 2–3 times) compared to those in S0, confirming that the excited state of these compounds is more polar than the ground state (Table S13, Fig. S29 and S30†). More importantly, a significant change in the orientation of μe vector compared to that of μg is observed for 2 toward that observed for 1 and typical for dipolar structure (Fig. 3a, S29 and S30†). Additionally, the magnitude of the effective dipole moment change Δμeg is large and almost the same for both compounds (Table S14†). The calculations also enabled to confirm fundamentally identical nature of the emitting excited state in 1 and 2. In Fig. 3c, the difference densities between the ground state and the excited state for 1 and 2 are presented with their negative (red)/positive (blue) values corresponding to outflow/inflow of electron density accompanying S1 → S0 fluorescence transition (see also Fig. S32†). It is clearly seen that S1 for both 1 and 2 exhibits the same intramolecular naphthalimide → helicene CT characteristics with involvement of only one naphthalimide unit in the case of 2 due to the excited-state symmetry-breaking effect (vide infra).17 Such localization is consistent with the observed ‘dipolar-like’ orientation of μe vector and rationalizes similar photophysical behaviour of both naphthalimide–helicenes. The difference density plots also reveals noticeable increase in the charge-transfer character of S1 excited states (more electron density transferred from naphthalimide group to helicene moiety) for 1 and 2 with the increase in the polarity of the solvent correlating well with the corresponding rise of μe values and higher stabilization of the excited state by polar solvents reflected in the larger red-shift of fluorescence spectra in such environments. The analysis of S1 → S0 emission in terms of individual MO pairs (Fig. S31 and Table S15†) shows that the process mainly corresponds to LUMO → HOMO transition with LUMO localized predominantly on the naphthalimide-alkynyl group and HOMO spanning over the helicene-alkynyl fragment and partially naphthalimide unit. While isosurface of LUMO hardly changes with the polarity of the solvent, for HOMO less/more electron density is observed on naphthalimide/helicene when going from cyclohexane to DMF, in agreement with the increase in the CT character of S1 for 1 and 2 in more polar environment.
Summarizing, unpolarized luminescence measurements and calculations for mono- and bis-substituted naphthalimide–helicene derivatives 1 and 2 reveal a similar evolution of their first excited state with the solvent polarity, even though the latter may be viewed in its ground state as pseudo-quadrupolar A–π–D–π–A structure with a slightly smaller resultant electronic dipole moment than in 1. Such behaviour has been reported for numerous multibranched achiral push–pull molecules,17 and rationalized in terms of a symmetry-breaking in excited state due to structural fluctuations via vibrational relaxation and/or solvation effects. The reported computations demonstrate essentially the same character of S1 excited state for 2 in both non-polar and polar solvents (and also in gas-phase) indicating that the observed localization of the excitation is predominantly induced by nuclear relaxation that involves mainly planarization of the naphthalimide units with respect to the corresponding terminal helicene phenyl ring (leading consequently to increase in naphthalimide–helicene π-conjugation) upon excited-state geometry optimization (Fig. S26†). Note that similar excited-state localization for an A–π–D–π–A-type system was reported and described in terms of a Frenkel exciton model for example in ref. 17a. Note also that Vauthey et al. have recently been able to directly visualize such excited-state symmetry-breaking process using ultra-fast time-resolved infrared spectroscopy, thus providing fundamental understanding of this phenomenon and opening new perspectives for multipolar π-conjugated systems in optoelectronic applications and photochemistry.17d,e,18
Fig. 4 CPL spectra of 2 (middle panel) and 1 (bottom panel) in cyclohexane (black), CH2Cl2 (blue), and DMF (red) at 298 K (∼10−5 M). For a comparison, fluorescence spectra of 2 are presented in the top panel (the corresponding spectra for 1 are not shown as they are similar to those for 2). See ESI† for a full set of recorded spectra. |
The effect of the solvation on CPL intensity is also visible in the computed results that show almost constant rotatory strength R and the corresponding glum values for S1 → S0 fluorescence transition in different solvents for 1, and their noticeable (although clearly underestimated comparing to the experiment) increase when changing the polarity of the solvent from CH2Cl2 and DMF to cyclohexane for 2 (Tables S10 and S11†). Keeping in mind that R is a function of the magnitudes of the underlying electric d and magnetic m transition dipole moments and the angle θ between their vectors, this enhancement can be traced back to an increase in the value of m and a more beneficial orientation factor observed in 2 for cyclohexane vs. more polar solvents (Table S15 and Fig. S33†). This solvent-dependent modulation of m and θ along with the chiral exciton coupling between individual helicene → naphthalimide ICT transitions established in the low-energy region of the UV-vis and ECD spectra for 2 (with S0 → S1 and S0 → S2 constituting the exciton couplet) indicate that its unprecedented for organic CPL emitters behaviour can also be linked to the corresponding coupling in the excited state with the resulting lower-energy couplet's component (emitting S1 state) undergoing localization on one naphthalimide branch due to nuclear relaxation. This seems to be further supported by overall strong enhancement of the CPL intensity for 2vs.1 visible in the experiment following similar trends in the UV-vis and ECD signals. In the presence of an intense reaction field imposed by the polar solvents the electrostatic interaction between electric transition dipoles (each connected with either one of the electron acceptor unit) is suppressed,17i affecting magnetic transition dipoles and their relative orientations, and, as a consequence, a decrease in the CPL intensity is observed.
Finally, it is thus worth emphasizing that 2 exhibits in cyclohexane one of the highest glum values reported to date for (small) organic molecules in solution,1f,4c,19 which highlights the benefits of chiral exciton coupling strategy to enhance the chiroptical properties of helicene-based dyes.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. CCDC 1894823. For ESI and crystallographic data in CIF or other electronic format see DOI: 10.1039/c9sc05231c |
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