The Position of the N Atom Plays a Significant Role for Excited-State Decay of Heterocycles.
Bin-Bin XieXiang-Yang LiuQiu FangWei-Hai FangGanglong CuiPublished in: The journal of physical chemistry letters (2017)
We have employed combined electronic structure calculations and nonadiabatic dynamics simulations to study the S1 radiationless deactivation mechanism of pyrazole. In terms of MS-CASPT2 computed results, we propose that the 1πσ* state-driven nonadiabatic N-N dissociation is a major relaxation path; the ring-puckering deformation path as well as the 1πσ* state-driven N-H dissociation are less favorable. This excited-state decay mechanism is supported by MS-CASPT2 nonadiabatic dynamics simulations. The present study demonstrates that pyrazole has a different excited-state radiationless deactivation mechanism compared with its structural isomer imidazole, in which the 1πσ* state-driven nonadiabatic N-H dissociation plays a more important role. However, such a channel is suppressed in pyrazole; instead, the 1πσ* state-driven nonadiabatic N-N dissociation is dominant.