Damming an electronic energy reservoir: ion-regulated electronic energy shuttling in a [2]rotaxane

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Abstract

We demonstrate the first example of bidirectional reversible electronic energy transfer (REET) between the mechanically bonded components of a rotaxane. Our prototypical system was designed such that photoexcitation of a chromophore in the axle results in temporary storage of electronic energy in a quasi-isoenergetic “reservoir” chromophore in the macrocycle. Over time, the emissive state of the axle is repopulated from this reservoir, resulting in long-lived, delayed luminescence. Importantly, we show that cation binding in the cavity formed by the mechanical bond perturbs the axle chromophore energy levels, modulating the REET process, and ultimately providing a luminescence read-out of cation binding. Modulation of REET processes represents an unexplored mechanism in luminescent molecular sensor development.

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Yu, S., Kupryakov, A., Lewis, J. E. M., Martí-Centelles, V., Goldup, S. M., Pozzo, J. L., … McClenaghan, N. D. (2021). Damming an electronic energy reservoir: ion-regulated electronic energy shuttling in a [2]rotaxane. Chemical Science, 12(26), 9196–9200. https://doi.org/10.1039/d1sc02225c

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