Moderately Strong Photoacid Dissociates in Alcohols with High Transient Concentration of the Proton-Transfer Contact Pair
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American Chemical Society
Abstract
Proton transfer from strong photoacids to hydroxylic solvents is much under debate. Experimentally, the main issue stems from relaxation and diffusion processes that are concomitant with ultrafast proton transfer and blur population dynamics. To overcome this, we propose a fast photodissociation reaction that, however, proceeds slower than solvent relaxation. Fluorescence spectroscopy of the cationic photoacid 2-(1′-hydroxy-2′-naphtyl)benzimidazolium reveals a two-stage mechanism: (a) reversible elementary proton transfer inside the solvent shell and (b) irreversible contact-pair splitting. The time evolution of the fluorescence signal is complex, yet this is explained quantitatively by simultaneous, spectrally overlapping emission of the acid, the conjugate base, and the contact proton-transfer pair. The latter attains high transient concentration in linear alcohols. Microscopic rate constants of dissociation are determined
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This is the peer-reviewed version of the following article:
The Journal of Physical Chemistry Letters 2014, 5, 989–994, DOI: 10.1021/jz5001648, which has been published in final form at https://pubs.acs.org/doi/abs/10.1021/jz5001648.
This article may be used for non-commercial purposes only
Bibliographic citation
Brenlla, A., Veiga Gutiérrez, M., Ríos Rodríguez, M., Rodríguez-Prieto, F., Mosquera, M., & Pérez Lustres, J. (2014). Moderately Strong Photoacid Dissociates in Alcohols with High Transient Concentration of the Proton-Transfer Contact Pair. The Journal Of Physical Chemistry Letters, 5(6), 989-994. doi: 10.1021/jz5001648
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https://doi.org/10.1021/jz5001648Sponsors
We thank the Spanish Government and the European Regional Development Fund (Grants CTQ2010-17835 and CTQ2010-17026) and the Xunta de Galicia (Grants CN 2012/314,EM2012/091, and GPC2013/052) for financial support of our work. J.L.P.L. thanks the Spanish Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness for funding through the Ramón y Cajal Programm 2009. M.V.G. and A.B. thank the Spanish Government and the “Segundo Gil-Dávila” Foundation, respectively, for financial support
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© 2014 American Chemical Society








