How an Eight-Membered Ring Alters the Rhodamine Chromophore

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Abstract

Readily available phenylene-1,3-diamines can be converted into unprecedented analogues of rhodamine and malachite green possessing a central eight-membered ring in three steps. The overall process couples a cyanine chromophore with a urea bridge giving rise to new dyes possessing distinct spectral characteristics: absorption of orange light combined with a weak emission of red light both in solution and in the crystalline state. Their photophysics is governed by the twist of lateral phenyl rings and intramolecular and intermolecular CT transitions.

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Poronik, Y. M., Ambicki, F., Tseng, S. M., Chou, P. T., Deperasińska, I., & Gryko, D. T. (2020). How an Eight-Membered Ring Alters the Rhodamine Chromophore. Journal of Organic Chemistry, 85(9), 5973–5980. https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.joc.0c00414

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