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A 1-Hydroxy-1H-imidazole ESIPT Emitter Demonstrating anti-Kasha Fluorescence and Direct Excitation of a Tautomeric Form.

Nikita A ShekhovtsovElena B NikolaenkovaAlexey S BerezinVictor F PlyusninKaterina A VinogradovaDmitry Yu NaumovNatalia V PervukhinaAlexsei Ya TikhonovMark B Bushuev
Published in: ChemPlusChem (2022)
The ability of 1-hydroxy-1H-imidazoles to exist in the form of two prototropic tautomers, the N-hydroxy and the N-oxide forms, can be utilized in the design of new types of ESIPT-fluorophores (ESIPT=excited state intramolecular proton transfer). Here we report the first example of 1-hydroxy-1H-imidazole-based ESIPT-fluorophores, 1-hydroxy-5-methyl-2,4-di(pyridin-2-yl)-1H-imidazole (HL), featuring a short intramolecular hydrogen bond O-H⋅⋅⋅N (O⋅⋅⋅N 2.56 Å) as a pre-requisite for ESIPT. The emission of HL originates from the anti-Kasha S 2 →S 0 fluorescence in the N-oxide form as a result of a large S 2 -S 1 energy gap slowing down the S 2 →S 1 internal conversion. Due to an energy barrier between the N-hydroxy and N-oxide forms in the ground state, the HL molecules can be trapped and photoexcited in the N-oxide form leading to the Stokes shift of ca. 60 nm which is the smallest among known ESIPT-fluorophores.
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