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Ethyl acetoacetate and acetylacetone appended hexabromo porphyrins: synthesis, spectral, electrochemical, and femtosecond third-order nonlinear optical studies.

Renu Kumari RohalDipanjan BanerjeeTavleen ManchandaVarusha BhardwajVenugopal Rao SomaMuniappan Sankar
Published in: Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003) (2023)
Asymmetrically substituted porphyrins possessing ethyl acetoacetate or acetylacetone (EAA or acac) with six bromine atoms at β-positions were synthesized and then characterized by various spectroscopic techniques, such as UV-Vis, fluorescence and NMR, and also by CV, DFT, MALDI-TOF-MS and elemental analysis. The mechanistic pathway followed the nucleophilic substitution reaction (nucleophile: EAA and acac) with MTPP(NO 2 )Br 6 (M = 2H, Cu(II), and Ni(II)), and the resultant β-heptasubstituted porphyrins exhibited keto-enol tautomerism, as supported by 1 H NMR spectroscopy. The six bulky bromo and EAA/acac groups made the macrocyclic ring highly electron deficient and nonplanar such that the quantum yield and fluorescence intensity for H 2 TPP[EAA]Br 6 and H 2 TPP[acac]Br 6 were severely reduced in contrast to those values for H 2 TPP. The poor electron density and nonplanarity over the porphyrin ring shifted the first oxidation potential from 11 to 521 mV anodically for MTPP[X]Br 6 [M = 2H, Cu(II), and Ni(II); X = EAA or acac] as compared to corresponding MTPPs. Notably, density functional theory proved the nonplanarity of the synthesized porphyrins as Δ24 spans from ±0.546 to ± 0.559 Å while Δ C β stretches from ±0.973 to ±1.162 Å. The third-order nonlinear optical measurements were performed using the femtosecond pulsed laser Z -scan technique at 800 nm and 1 kHz repetition rate to acquire insights into nonlinear absorption and nonlinear refraction of the porphyrins. The three-photon absorption coefficients ( γ ) are in the range of 2.2 × 10 -23 -2.8 × 10 -23 cm 3 W -2 and the nonlinear refractive index values were in the range of 3.7 × 10 -16 -5.1 × 10 -16 cm 2 W -1 . The higher-order nonlinear absorption exhibited by porphyrins helps improve resolution at depth for various photonic and optoelectronic applications.
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