Excited-State Proton Transfer in 8-Azapurines I: A Kinetic Analysis of 8-Azaxanthine Fluorescence.
Jacek WierzchowskiBogdan SmykPublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2020)
A super-continuum white laser with a half-pulse width of ~75 ps was used to observe the kinetics of a postulated excited-state proton transfer in 8-azaxanthine and its 8-methyl derivative. Both compounds exhibited dual emissions in weakly acidified alcoholic media, but only one band was present in aqueous solutions, exhibiting an abnormal Stokes shift (>12,000 cm-1). It was shown that long-wavelength emissions were delayed relative to the excitation pulse within alcoholic media. The rise time was calculated to be 0.4-0.5 ns in both methanol and deuterated methanol. This is equal to the main component of the fluorescence decay in the short-wavelength band (340 nm). Time-resolved emission spectra (TRES) indicated a two-state photo-transformation model in both compounds. Global analysis of the time dependence revealed three exponential components in each compound, one of which had an identical rise-time, with the second attributed to a long-wavelength band decay (6.4 ns for aza-xanthine and 8.3 ns for its 8-methyl derivative). The origin of the third, intermediate decay time (1.41 ns for aza-xanthine and 0.87 ns for 8-methyl-azaxanthine) is uncertain, but decay-associated spectra (DAS) containing both bands suggest the participation of a contact ion pair. These results confirm the model of phototautomerism proposed earlier, but the question of the anomalous isotope effect remains unsolved.