A new technique employed to study the photophysical properties of the zinc(II) tetraphenylporphine cation radical is reported. It employs a combination of controlled potential coulometry and femtosecond absorption spectrometry. The fast transient lifetime of 17 ps of the pi-cation species originates in very efficient mixing of the a(2u) HOMO cation orbital that places electronic density mainly on pyrrolic nitrogens and metal d-orbitals. That explains the lack of any emission of the cationic species. This nonradiative decay process might elucidate the processes taking place in photosynthetic systems when an electron is removed from the porphyrinic moiety and the hole is produced.
Poly(acene)s are significant compounds for various electronic applications. A clean, one-step synthesis involves alpha-diketones (2-4), which undergo facile Strating-Zwanenburg photodecarbonylation producing the corresponding poly(acene)s (i.e., anthracene, hexacene, and heptacene, respectively). Compounds 2-4 show weak fluorescence (lambdaF=approximately 525-530 nm and PhiF=approximately 0.1-0.4%) and phosphorescence (lambdaPh=approximately 565-570 nm) and have a small singlet-triplet energy gap (S1-T1 gap, approximately 4 kcal/mol) that facilitates rapid intersystem crossing from the singlet to the triplet state. Both the singlet states (tauS=approximately 20-218 ps) and the triplet states (tauT=approximately 370 ps to <7 ns) of 2-4 are short-lived, while the decarbonylation of 2-4 is a rapid process occurring within 7 ns from both the singlet and the triplet manifolds. The nanosecond laser flash photolysis of 4 also reveals the T-T absorption of heptacene (580 nm, tau=approximately 11 micros).
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