Because of the advantages of tunability via size, shape, doping, and relatively low level of loss and high extent of spatial confinement, graphene quantum dots (GQDs) are emerging as an effective way to control light by molecular engineering. The collective excitation in GQDs shows high energy plasmon frequency along with frequencies in the terahertz (THz) region, making these systems powerful materials for photonic technologies. Here, we report a systematic study of the linear and nonlinear optical properties of large varieties of GQDs (∼400 systems) in size and topology utilizing the strengths of both semiempirical and firstprinciples methods. Our detailed study shows how the spectral shift and trends in the optical nonlinearity of GQDs depend on their structure, size, and shape. Among the circular, triangular, stripe, and random shaped GQDs, we find that GQDs with inequivalent sublattice atoms always possess lower HOMO−LUMO gap, broadband absorption, and high nonlinear optical coefficients. Also, we find that a majority of the GQDs with interesting linear and nonlinear optical properties have zigzag edges, although the reverse is not always true. We strongly believe that our findings can act as guidelines to design GQDs in optical parametric oscillators, higher harmonic generators, and optical modulators.
In this paper, we present spectroscopic signatures of intramolecular charge transfer (ICT) and effects of solvent on the ICT process in 3-(phenylamino)-2-cyclohexen-1-one (PACO), a member of the well-known molecular family, the beta-enaminones. The dual fluorescence in the steady state emission spectra of the molecule in polar solvents indicates the occurrence of ICT, which is further supported by time-resolved studies, using time correlated single photon counting technique with picosecond resolution. To understand the nature of the charge transfer, pH dependent studies of the probe in water were performed, where a quenching of fluorescence was observed even in the presence of very low concentrations of acids. Solvent induced fluorescence quenching was observed in ethanol and methanol. The ICT process was also investigated by quantum chemical calculations. To understand the role of solvents in the ICT process, we have theoretically studied the macroscopic and microscopic solvation of the probe in water. The absorption spectra of the molecule in the gas phase as well as in water were simulated using time dependent density functional theory with cc-pVTZ basis set and self-consistent reaction field theory that models macroscopic solvation. The possibility of microscopic solvation in water was probed theoretically and the formation of 1:3 molecular clusters by PACO with water molecules has been confirmed. Our findings could have a bearing on pH sensing applications of the probe.
We report here on the steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence studies on proton-transfer (PT) reaction of 4-methyl 2,6-diformyl phenol (MFOH) in confined nanocavities in three solvents, dimethyl sulfoxide (DMSO), dimethyl formamide (DMF), and water. Though DMSO and DMF individually interact with MFOH in a similar fashion, their modes of interaction get significantly modified in the presence of cyclodextrin (CD) nanocages. In DMSO, in the ground state, the solvated molecular anion of MFOH forms 1:1 inclusion complex with beta- or gamma-CD and attains greater stability compared to the normal form. In DMF, the solvated molecular anion gets converted to the H-bonded complex within the CD cavity resulting in a 50-nm blue shift in the absorption spectra. In the excited state, the anionic species gets more stabilized in DMSO while in DMF it is significantly destabilized in the presence of CDs. However, in case of water, MFOH gets trapped inside the water cages so that the CDs fail to complex with it effectively. There are also no changes in the excited-state lifetimes in water in the presence of CDs, but in case of DMSO and DMF, because of restricted rotation of the formyl group within the CD cavity, the contribution of the shorter lifetime components reduce significantly increasing the larger components. Some theoretical calculations at the AM1 level of approximation have also been carried out to demonstrate how the dipolar nature of the solvent influences excited-state PT in confined media.
We present here the effects of geometrically constrained environments on the proton transfer reaction of 4-methyl 2,6-diformyl phenol (MFOH) both in the ground and excited states by employing steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence spectroscopy having picosecond and femtosecond resolutions. The nanometer-sized water pools formed in the ternary microemulsion of n-heptane-aerosol OT-water promote reprotonation of the probe. As we go on increasing the water content up to a certain value in the ground state whereas deprotonation is favored in the excited state. The emission intensity has a complex behavior as the water content is changed in the system. The lower fluidity of confined water within the reverse micelle with respect to the normal bulk water alters the related dynamics of the H-bonded network. These observations are rationalized on the basis of altered ionic water activity in the confined surroundings, i.e., on dielectric constant, ionic mobility, pH, and the favorable orientation of dipoles in the medium. Our observations might be helpful to infer about the characteristics of nanoreactors, which often mimic many biological hydrophilic pockets.
Employing a combination of many-body configuration interaction method described by extended Hubbard model along with first principle calculations we predict the emergence of high oscillator strength at near-IR region which originates from the Davydov type of splitting in doped graphene quantum dots (GQD). Incorporation of strain in GQD promotes closely spaced bright states inciting for coherent excitation. Controlling the destructive interference of
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