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Triangular Rhodamine Triads and Their Intrinsic Photophysics Revealed from Gas-Phase Ion Fluorescence Experiments.

Ying ZhaoEmma Rostal SørensenThomas Toft LindkvistChristina KjaerMogens Brøndsted NielsenLi ChenSteen Brøndsted Nielsen
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2021)
When ionic dyes are close together, the internal Coulomb interaction may affect their photophysics and the energy-transfer efficiency. To explore this, we have prepared triangular architectures of three rhodamines connected to a central triethynylbenzene unit (1,3,5-tris(buta-1,3-diyn-1-yl)benzene) based on acetylenic coupling reactions and measured fluorescence spectra of the isolated, triply charged ions in vacuo. We find from comparisons with previously reported monomer and dimer spectra that while polarization of the π-system causes redshifted emission, the separation between the rhodamines is too large for a Stark shift. This picture is supported by electrostatic calculations on model systems composed of three linear and polarizable ionic dyes in D3h configuration: The electric field that each dye experiences from the other two is too small to induce a dipole moment, both in the ground and the excited state. In the case of heterotrimers that contain either two rhodamine 575 (R575) and one R640 or one R575 and two R640, emission is almost purely from R640 although the polarization of the π-system expectedly diminishes the dipole-dipole interaction.
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