Double crossing conical intersections and anti-Vavilov fluorescence in tetraphenyl ethylene

J Chem Phys. 2022 Apr 14;156(14):144302. doi: 10.1063/5.0082679.

Abstract

Conical intersections (CIs) provide effective fast nonradiative decay pathways for electronic excitation, which can significantly influence molecular photoluminescence properties. However, in many cases, crossing a CI does not have direct observables, making studies of CIs experimentally challenging. Herein, the theoretically predicted double CIs by cis-trans twisting and cyclization in tetraphenyl ethylene, a well-known aggregation-induced emission molecule, are investigated with excitation dependent ultrafast UV/IR spectroscopy and fluorescence. Both the fluorescence quantum yield and the efficiency of cyclization are found to be smaller with a shorter excitation wavelength. An abrupt change occurs at about 300-310 nm. The results imply that crossing the twisting CI has a larger barrier than the cyclization CI, and the cis-trans twisting motion is probably involved with large solvation reorganization.

MeSH terms

  • Ethylenes
  • Spectrum Analysis*

Substances

  • Ethylenes
  • ethylene