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Steady-State Spectroscopy to Single Out the Contact Ion Pair in Excited-State Proton Transfer.

Alexander GrandjeanJ Luis Pérez LustresStephan MuthDaniel MausGregor Jung
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2021)
Despite the outstanding relevance of proton transfer reactions, investigations of the solvent dependence on the elementary step are scarce. We present here a probe system of a pyrene-based photoacid and a phosphine oxide, which forms stable hydrogen-bonded complexes in aprotic solvents of a broad polarity range. By using a photoacid, an excited-state proton transfer (ESPT) along the hydrogen bond can be triggered by a photon and observed via fluorescence spectroscopy. Two emission bands could be identified and assigned to the complexed photoacid (CPX) and the hydrogen-bonded ion pair (HBIP) by a solvatochromism analysis based on the Lippert-Mataga model. The latter indicates that the difference in the change of the permanent dipole moment of the two species upon excitation is ∼3 D. This implies a displacement of the acidic hydrogen by ∼65 pm, which is in quantitative agreement with a change of the hydrogen bond configuration from O-H···O to -O···H-O+.
Keyphrases
  • electron transfer
  • ionic liquid
  • single molecule
  • high resolution
  • visible light
  • living cells
  • air pollution
  • risk assessment
  • energy transfer
  • solar cells
  • data analysis