Mechanical-Bond-Induced Exciplex Fluorescence in an Anthracene-Based Homo[2]Catenane.

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY(2020)

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摘要
Collisional intermolecular interactions between excited states form short-lived dimers and complexes that lead to the emergence of excimer/ exciplex emission of lower energy, a phenomenon which must be differentiated from the photoluminescence (PL) arising from the monomeric molecules. Although the utilization of noncovalent bonding interactions, leading to the generation of excimer/exciplex PL, has been investigated extensively, precise control of the aggregates and their persistence at very low concentrations remains a rare phenomenon. In the search for a fresh approach, we sought to obtain exciplex PL from permanent structures by incorporating anthracene moieties into pyridinium-containing mechanically interlocked molecules. Beyond the optical properties of the anthracene moieties, their pi-extended nature enforces [pi center dot center dot center dot pi] stacking that can overcome the Coulombic repulsion between the pyridinium units, affording an efficient synthesis of an octacationic homo[2]catenane. Notably, upon increasing the ionic strength by adding tetrabutylammonium hexafluorophosphate, the catenane yield increases significantly as a result of the decrease in Coulombic repulsions between the pyridinium units. Although the ground- state photophysical properties of the free cyclophane and the catenane are similar and show a charge-transfer band at similar to 455 nm, their PL characters are distinct, denoting different excited states. The cyclophane emits at similar to 562 nm (quantum yield OF = 3.6%, emission lifetime phi(F) = 3 ns in MeCN), which is characteristic of a disubstituted anthracene-pyridinium linker. By contrast, the catenane displays an exciplex PL at low concentration (10(-8) M) with an emission band centered on 650 nm (phi(F) = 0.5%, tau(s) = 14 ns) in MeCN and at 675 nm in aqueous solution. Live-cell imaging performed in MIAPaCa-2 prostate cancer cells confirmed that the catenane exciplex emission can be detected at micromolar concentrations.
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