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Cruciforms’ Polarized Emission Confirms Disjoint Molecular Orbitals and Excited States
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Citations
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References
2012
Year
Localized Excited StateEngineeringExcitation Energy TransferComputational ChemistryChemistryElectronic Excited StatePhosphorescence ImagingExcited StatesOccupied Molecular OrbitalsElectronic ExcitationThird Excited StateThermally Activated Delayed FluorescencePhotophysical PropertyPhysicsAtomic PhysicsPhysical ChemistryQuantum ChemistryExcited State PropertyNatural Sciences
Steady-state and time-resolved polarized spectroscopy studies reveal that electronic excitation to the third excited state of 1,4-distyryl-2,5-bis(arylethynyl)benzene cruciforms results in fluorescence emission that is shifted an angle of ca. 60°. This result is consistent with quantum chemical calculations of the lowest electronic excited states and their transition dipole moments. The shift originates from the disjointed nature of the occupied molecular orbitals being localized on the different branches of the cruciforms.
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