Effect of the Solvent Environment on the Spectroscopic Properties and Dynamics of the Lowest Excited States of Carotenoids

Harry A. Frank*, James A. Bautista, Jesusa Josue, Zeus Pendon, Roger G. Hiller, Frank P. Sharples, David Gosztola, Michael R. Wasielewski

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    291 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    The spectroscopic properties and dynamics of the lowest excited singlet states of peridinin, fucoxanthin, neoxanthin, uriolide acetate, spheroidene, and spheroidenone in several different solvents have been studied by steady-state absorption and fast-transient optical spectroscopic techniques. Peridinin, fucoxanthin, uriolide acetate, and spheroidenone, which contain carbonyl functional groups in conjugation with the carbon-carbon π-electron system, display broader absorption spectral features and are affected more by the solvent environment than neoxanthin and spheroidene, which do not contain carbonyl functional groups. The possible sources of the spectral broadening are explored by examining the absorption spectra at 77 K in glassy solvents. Also, carotenoids which contain carbonyls have complex transient absorption spectra and show a pronounced dependence of the excited singlet state lifetime on the solvent environment. It is postulated that these effects are related to the presence of an intramolecular charge transfer state strongly coupled to the S1 (21Ag) excited singlet state. Structural variations in the series of carotenoids studied here make it possible to focus on the general molecular features that control the spectroscopic and dynamic properties of carotenoids.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)4569-4577
    Number of pages9
    JournalJournal of Physical Chemistry B
    Volume104
    Issue number18
    Publication statusPublished - 11 May 2000

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