Controlling conformations in alternating dialkylsilylene-spaced donor-acceptor copolymers by a cooperative Thorpe-Ingold effect and polymer folding

Chemistry. 2012 Jan 2;18(1):334-46. doi: 10.1002/chem.201102032. Epub 2011 Dec 8.

Abstract

A series of dialkylsilylene-spaced copolymers 6 and 7, which contain Me(2)Si and iPr(2)Si spacer groups, respectively, and have alternating donor and acceptor chromophores, have been designed and regioselectively synthesized by hydrosilylation. The ratio of the donor and acceptor chromophores for each repeat unit is 2:1, and the two donor chromophores are linked by a trimethylene bridge. A 4-aminostyrene moiety is used as the donor and a series of acceptor chromophores with different reduction potentials are employed. Both steady-state and kinetic measurements reveal that the photoinduced electron transfer (PET) in 6 obeyed the Marcus theory in which normal and inverted regions are observed. On the other hand, the iPr(2)Si-spaced copolymers 7 exhibit absorption and emission from the charge-transfer complexes exclusively due to ground-state interactions between the donor and acceptor chromophores. The discrepancy in photophysical behavior may have arisen from the difference in distance between the adjacent donor and acceptor chromophores. The bulkiness of the substituents on the silicon atom (i.e., Me versus iPr) may exert the Thorpe-Ingold effect on the local conformation around the silicon atom. The differences in the small energetic barriers for each of the conformational states may be amplified by extending the distance of the folding structure, which results in perturbing the conformation of the polymers. These results suggest that the electronic interactions between adjacent donor-acceptor pairs in these copolymers are controlled by the synchronization of the substitution effect and corresponding polymeric structures.