Journal of Physical Chemistry A: Molecules, Spectroscopy, Kinetics, Environment and General Theory 2012-11-08

CCVJ is not a simple rotor probe.

Christopher Rumble, Kacie Rich, Gang He, Mark Maroncelli

文献索引:J. Phys. Chem. A 116(44) , 10786-92, (2012)

全文:HTML全文

摘要

The photochemistry of the rotor probe 9-(2-carboxy-2-cyanovinyl)julolidine (CCVJ) was studied to elucidate a curious effect of fluid flow previously reported. The apparent sensitivity to fluid motion observed in CCVJ but not in the closely related molecule 9-(dicyanovinyl)julolidine (DCVJ) is found to be an indirect effect of a photoisomerization reaction. The results presented here demonstrate that it is this isomerization, rather than the commonly assumed TICT process, that confers viscosity-sensing ability on these fluorophores. In micromolar solutions in hydroxylic solvents CCVJ exists primarily in the carboxylate form. Only the E isomer of this anion is initially present in solutions prepared from the solid, but in room light such solutions rapidly achieve a photostationary state in which the E isomer and an essentially nonfluorescent Z isomer exist in comparable concentrations. The Z isomer is metastable in S(0) such that in the absence of light the solution reverts slowly to pure E. Unlike DCVJ where only a single isomer is possible, the production of long-lived photoproducts in CCVJ and other asymmetrically substituted styryenyl probes complicates their fluorescence response. Considerable care is needed when such fluorphores are used as steady-state sensors of environmental fluidity are used.


相关化合物

  • 9-(2-羧基-2-氰基乙...

相关文献:

Fluorescence anisotropy of molecular rotors.

2011-02-25

[ChemPhysChem 12(3) , 662-72, (2011)]

Differential scanning fluorescence approach using a fluorescent molecular rotor to detect thermostability of proteins in surfactant-containing formulations.

2013-01-30

[Int. J. Pharm. 441(1-2) , 255-60, (2013)]

更多文献...