Tuning delocalization in the radical cations of 1,4-bis 4-(diarylamino)styryl benzenes, 2,5-bis 4-(diarylamino)styryl thiophenes, and 2,5-bis 4-(diarylamino)styryl pyrroles through substituent effects.

TitleTuning delocalization in the radical cations of 1,4-bis 4-(diarylamino)styryl benzenes, 2,5-bis 4-(diarylamino)styryl thiophenes, and 2,5-bis 4-(diarylamino)styryl pyrroles through substituent effects.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2012
JournalJournal of the American Chemical Society
Volume134
Issue24
Pagination10146-55
Date Published2012
ISSN0002-7863
Abstract

Radical cations have been generated for 10 bis[4-(diarylamino)styryl]arenes and heteroarenes to investigate the effect of the electron-richness of the terminal groups and of the bridging (hetero)arene on delocalization. The intervalence charge-transfer bands of these radical cations vary from weak broad Gaussians, indicative of localized class-II mixed-valence species, to strong relatively narrow asymmetric bands, characteristic of delocalized class-III bis(diarylamino) species, to narrow symmetric bands in cases where the bridge contribution to the singly occupied molecular orbital is largest. Hush analysis of these bands yields estimates of the electronic coupling varying from 480 cm(-1) (electron-poor bridge, most electron-rich terminal aryl groups) to 1000 cm(-1) (electron-rich bridge, least electron-rich termini) if the diabatic electron-transfer distance, R(ab), is equated to the N-N separation. Computational and electron spin resonance (ESR) evidence for displacement of the diabatic states into the bridge (reduced R(ab)) suggests that these values are underestimates and that even more variation is to be expected through the series. Several dications have also been studied. The vis-NIR absorption of the dication of (E,E)-1,4-bis{4-[bis(4-n-butoxyphenyl)amino]styryl}-2,5-dicyanobenzene is seen at an energy similar to that of the strongest band in the spectrum of the corresponding weakly coupled monocation, with approximately twice the absorptivity, and its ESR spectrum suggests essentially noninteracting radical centers. In contrast, the electronic spectra of class-III monocations show no clear relationship to those of the corresponding dications, which ESR reveals to be singlet species.

URLhttps://doi.org/10.1021/ja3023048
DOI10.1021/ja3023048
Short TitleJ Am Chem Soc