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Molecular Physics
An International Journal at the Interface Between Chemistry and Physics
Volume 104, 2006 - Issue 5-7: A Special Issue in Honour of Professor Michael Albert Robb
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Original Articles

Conformationally restricted 2,5-diphenyloxazoles: failure of the electromer model for anomalous amplified spontaneous emission spikes

, , , &
Pages 957-969 | Received 02 Jul 2005, Accepted 18 Jul 2005, Published online: 21 Feb 2007
 

Abstract

The amplified spontaneous emission (ASE) that develops on pulsed excitation of concentrated solutions of 2,5-diphenyloxazole (PPO) and related molecules is a nonlinear optical response that is considered anomalous. It consists of dual laser spikes whose relative intensity depends on laser excitation intensity: At the highest laser powers, the dominant spike corresponds to the less intense vibronic band in the normal fluorescence spectrum. This behaviour was attributed to electromers, a class of excited state conformers distinguished by having either the 2- or the 5-phenyl moiety coplanar with the oxazole ring and the other phenyl moiety twisted out-of-plane. Here, it is reported that under the same excitation conditions (266 nm laser excitation) the same ASE response is exhibited when nonplanarity at the 5 position is sterically favoured by 4-alkyl substitution (methyl or tert-butyl, MePPO and t-BuPPO, respectively). Although the X-ray structure of t-BuPPO shows the 5-phenyl group twisted 72° relative to the oxazole plane, t-BuPPO develops two ASE spikes and, on raising laser excitation intensity, the spike corresponding to the weaker vibronic band gains in intensity relative to the spike corresponding to the Franck–Condon (F–C) maximum, mirroring the behaviour of PPO. Accordingly, the electromer model for anomalous ASE spikes must be abandoned. Interestingly, imposing coplanarity of the 5-phenyl group in the rigid phenylindenooxazole (PIO) analogue leads to normal ASE behaviour. A single ASE spike develops that corresponds to the F–C maximum in the fluorescence spectrum of PIO. The different responses of these molecules may reflect different vibronic relaxation rates in the ground state manifold that control the ability of the molecules to maintain inverted populations with respect to ASE active transitions. Another possibility is that changes in relative spike intensity are due to weak differential transient absorption of the two ASE spikes. In the course of this work, a new method for the synthesis of 2,4,5-trisubstituted oxazoles was developed which may be of general use.

Acknowledgements

The National Science Foundation supported this work, most recently with Grant No CHE 0314784. We thank Dr Juan Carlos del Valle for some of the ASE measurements and for helpful discussions, Dr Umesh Goli for the measurement of the mass spectrum and Mr Igor V. Muravyov for advice on oxazole synthesis.

Notes

†Tables of X-ray data for 4-t-BuPPO consisting of crystallographic parameters, positional parameters, bond distances, bond angles, and torsional angles will be available in R. J. Clark, R. A. Ivanov, and J. Saltiel. Acta Cryst. E. In preparation.

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