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Potent strategy towards strongly emissive nitroaromatics through a weakly electron-deficient core.

Bartłomiej SadowskiMarzena KaliszewskaYevgen M PoronikMałgorzata CzichyPatryk JanasikMarzena BanasiewiczDominik MierzwaWojciech GadomskiTrevor D LohreyJohn Anthony ClarkMieczysław ŁapkowskiBolesław KozankiewiczValentine Ivanov VullevAndrzej L SobolewskiPiotr PiatkowskiDaniel T Gryko
Published in: Chemical science (2021)
Nitroaromatics seldom fluoresce. The importance of electron-deficient (n-type) conjugates, however, has inspired a number of strategies for suppressing the emission-quenching effects of the strongly electron-withdrawing nitro group. Here, we demonstrate how such strategies yield fluorescent nitroaryl derivatives of dipyrrolonaphthyridinedione (DPND). Nitro groups near the DPND core quench its fluorescence. Conversely, nitro groups placed farther from the core allow some of the highest fluorescence quantum yields ever recorded for nitroaromatics. This strategy of preventing the known processes that compete with photoemission, however, leads to the emergence of unprecedented alternative mechanisms for fluorescence quenching, involving transitions to dark nπ* singlet states and aborted photochemistry. Forming nπ* triplet states from ππ* singlets is a classical pathway for fluorescence quenching. In nitro-DPNDs, however, these ππ* and nπ* excited states are both singlets, and they are common for nitroaryl conjugates. Understanding the excited-state dynamics of such nitroaromatics is crucial for designing strongly fluorescent electron-deficient conjugates.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • solar cells
  • cancer therapy
  • electron microscopy
  • electron transfer
  • single molecule
  • signaling pathway
  • wild type
  • solid state