| Literature DB >> 27549912 |
Jiawang Zhou1, Victor K Outlaw1, Craig A Townsend1, Arthur E Bragg2.
Abstract
Fluorescent-sensor design requires consideration of how photochemical dynamics control properties of a sensing state. Transient absorption (TA) spectroscopy reveals an ultrafast net [1,3]-hydrogen shift following excitation of a protonated methoxy benzoindolizine (bzi) sensor in solution. These photochemical dynamics explain a quenched pH-responsive fluorescence shift and dramatically reduced fluorescence quantum yield relative to other (e. g. methyl) bzi compounds that do not tautomerize. Calculations predict the energetic and structural feasibility for rearrangement in protonated bzi compounds, such that interaction between the pi-network and strongly electron-donating methoxyl must lower the barrier for suprafacial H or H+ shift across an allylic moiety. As bzi compounds broadly exhibit pH-responsive emission shifts, chemical interactions that modulate this electronic interaction and suppress tautomerization could be used to facilitate binding- or surface-specific acid-responsive sensing.Entities:
Keywords: benzoindolizine; femtochemistry; fluorescent probes; hydrogen transfer; time-resolved spectroscopy
Year: 2016 PMID: 27549912 PMCID: PMC5113014 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201603284
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236