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Time-Resolved Photochemistry of Stiffened Stilbenes.

Olivia A KrohnMartin QuickIlya N IoffeOlga N MazalevaDieter LenoirHeiner DetertSergey A Kovalenko
Published in: The journal of physical chemistry. B (2019)
Broadband transient absorption spectroscopy is used to study the photoisomerization of stiffened stilbenes in solution, specifically E/ Z mixtures of bis(benzocyclobutylidene) (t4, c4) and ( E)-1-(2,2-dimethyltetralinylidene)-2-2-dimethyltetraline (t6). Upon excitation to S1, all evolve to perpendicular molecular conformation P, followed by decay to S0, while the spectra and the kinetic behavior crucially depend on the size of the stiffening ring. In 4, contrary to all previously studied stilbenes, the trans and cis absorption and excited-state spectra are nearly indistinguishable, while the corresponding isomerization times are comparable: τi = 166 ps for t4 and τi = 64 ps for c4 in n-hexane, as opposed to 114 and 45 ps in acetonitrile, respectively. Faster isomerization in polar solvents agrees with the zwitterionic character of the P state. In t6, torsion to P is effectively barrier-less and completes within 0.3 ps, the S1 → P evolution being directly traceable through the transient spectra of stimulated emission and that of excited-state absorption. In n-hexane, the P state is remarkably long-lived, τP = 1840 ps, but the lifetime drops down to 35 ps in acetonitrile. The trans-to-cis photoisomerization yield for t6 is measured to be 20%, while for t4, it remains uncertain. We discuss the effects of stiffening and substitution on the formation and lifetime of the intermediate states through which the stilbene molecules evolve on the S1 energy surface.
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