Characterization of Excited-State Electronic Structure in Diblock π-Conjugated Oligomers with Adjustable Linker Electronic Coupling.
Habtom B GobezeMuhammed YounusMichael D TurlingtonSohel AhmedKirk S SchanzePublished in: Molecules (Basel, Switzerland) (2024)
Diblock conjugated oligomers are π-conjugated molecules that contain two segments having distinct frontier orbital energies and HOMO-LUMO gap offsets. These oligomers are of fundamental interest to understand how the distinct π-conjugated segments interact and modify their excited state properties. The current paper reports a study of two series of diblock oligomers that contain oligothiophene (T n ) and 4,7-bis(2-thienyl)-2,1,3-benzothiadiazole (TBT) segments that are coupled by either ethynyl (-C≡C-) or trans -(-C≡C-) 2 Pt(II)(PBu 3 ) 2 acetylide linkers. In these structures, the T n segment is electron rich (donor), and the TBT is electron poor (acceptor). The diblock oligomers are characterized by steady-state and time-resolved spectroscopy, including UV-visible absorption, fluorescence, fluorescence lifetimes, and ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy. Studies are compared in several solvents of different polarity and with different excitation wavelengths. The results reveal that the (-C≡C-) linked oligomers feature a delocalized excited state that takes on a charge transfer (CT) character in more polar media. In the (-C≡C-) 2 Pt(II)(PBu 3 ) 2 -linked oligomers, there is weak coupling between the T n and TBT segments. Consequently, short wavelength excitation selectively excites the T n segment, which then undergoes ultrafast energy transfer (~1 ps) to afford a TBT-localized excited state.