Intramolecular electron transfer in diastereomeric naphthalene–amine dyads: A fluorescence and laser flash photolysis study

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Abstract

Two dyads containing a naphthalene-like chromophore linked to a pyrrolidine-derived moiety, namely (S, S)- and (R, S)-NPX–PYR, have been synthesised by esterification of (S)- or (R)-naproxen (NPX) with (S)-N-methyl-2-pyrrolidinemethanol (PYR) and submitted to photophysical studies (steady-state and time-resolved fluorescence, as well as laser flash photolysis). The emission spectra of the dyads in acetonitrile were characterised by a typical band centred at 350 nm, identical to that of the reference compound (S)-NPX. However the intensities were clearly different, revealing a significant intramolecular quenching in the dyads, as well as a remarkable stereodifferentiation (factor of 1.6). Accordingly, the fluorescence lifetimes of the two dyads were different from each other and markedly shorter than that of (S)-NPX. The quenching mechanism is intramolecular electron transfer, that is thermodynamically favoured. Exciplex formation, that is nearly thermoneutral, does not compete efficiently. The electron transfer rate constants for (S, S)- and (R, S)-(NPX–PYR) were 1.8 × 108 and 2.8 × 108 s−1, respectively. By contrast, no significant intramolecular quenching was observed for the excited triplet states (λmax= 440 nm), generated by laser flash photolysis; this is in agreement with the fact that intramolecular electron transfer is thermodynamically disfavoured, due to the lower energy of excited triplets. © 2005 The Royal Society of Chemistry and Owner Societies.

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Abad, S., Pischel, U., & Miranda, M. A. (2005). Intramolecular electron transfer in diastereomeric naphthalene–amine dyads: A fluorescence and laser flash photolysis study. Photochemical and Photobiological Sciences, 4(1), 69–74. https://doi.org/10.1039/b409729g

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