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Disentangling Multiple Effects on Excited-State Intramolecular Charge Transfer among Asymmetrical Tripartite PPI-TPA/PCz Triads.

Sirui YangChen CaoAmjad IslamShanshan SunZiqi DengJiayu LiShaofei NiQing-Xiao TongMing-De Li
Published in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2020)
By utilizing the bipolarity of 1,2-diphenylphenanthroimidazole (PPI), two types of asymmetrical tripartite triads (PPI-TPA and PPI-PCz) were designed with triphenylamine (TPA) and 9-phenylcarbazole (PCz). These triads are deep-blue luminescent materials with a high fluorescence quantum yield of nearly 100 %. To trace the photophysical behaviors of these triads, their excited-state evolution channels and interchromophoric interactions were investigated by ultrafast time-resolved transient absorption and excited-state theoretical calculations. The results suggest that the electronic nature, asymmetrical tripartite structure, and electron-hole distance of these triads, as well as solvent polarity, determine the lifetime of intramolecular charge transfer (ICT). Interestingly, PPI-PCz triads show anti-Kasha ICT, and the charge-transfer direction among the triads is adjustable. For the PPI-TPA triad, the electron is transferred from TPA to PPI, whereas for the PPI-PCz triad the electron is pushed from PPI to PCz. Exploration of the excited-state ICT in these triads may pave the way to design better luminescent materials in the future.
Keyphrases
  • protein protein
  • energy transfer
  • small molecule
  • quantum dots
  • molecular dynamics
  • solar cells
  • electron microscopy