CEISAM UMR CNRS 6230, Université de Nantes, 2 rue de la Houssinière, BP 92208, 44322 Cedex 3 Nantes, France.
Acc Chem Res. 2016 Sep 20;49(9):1816-24. doi: 10.1021/acs.accounts.6b00299. Epub 2016 Aug 30.
Photoinduced electron transfer (PET) plays relevant roles in many areas of chemistry, including charge separation processes in photovoltaics, natural and artificial photosynthesis, and photoluminescence sensors and switches. As in many other photochemical scenarios, the structural and energetic factors play relevant roles in determining the rates and efficiencies of PET and its competitive photodeactivation processes. Particularly, in the field of fluorescent sensors and switches, intramolecular PET is believed (in many cases without compelling experimental proof) to be responsible of the quench of fluorescence. There is an increasing experimental interest in fluorophore's molecular design and on achieving optimal excitation/emission spectra, excitation coefficients, and fluorescence quantum yields (importantly for bioimaging purposes), but less efforts are devoted to fundamental mechanistic studies. In this Account, I revise the origins of the fluorescence quenching in some of these systems with state-of-the-art quantum chemical tools. These studies go beyond the common strategy of analyzing frontier orbital energy diagrams and performing PET thermodynamics calculations. Instead, the potential energy surfaces (PESs) of the lowest-lying excited states are explored with time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) and complete active space self-consistent field (CASSCF) calculations and the radiative and nonradiative decay rates from the involved excited states are computed from first-principles using a thermal vibration correlation function formalism. With such a strategy, this work reveals the real origins of the fluorescence quenching, herein entitled as dark-state quenching. Dark states (those that do not absorb or emit light) are often elusive to experiments and thus, computational investigations can provide novel insights into the actual photodeactivation mechanisms. The success of the dark-state quenching mechanism is demonstrated for a wide variety of fluorescent probes, including proton, cation and anion targets. Furthermore, this mechanism provides a general picture of the fluorescence quenching which englobes intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT), ratiometric quenching, and those radiationless mechanisms believed to be originated by PET. Finally, this Account provides for the first time a computational protocol to quantitatively estimate this phenomenon and provides the ingredients for the optimal design of fluorescent probes from first principles.
光诱导电子转移(PET)在化学的许多领域都发挥着重要作用,包括光伏器件中的电荷分离过程、自然和人工光合作用以及荧光传感器和开关。与许多其他光化学情况一样,结构和能量因素在决定 PET 的速率和效率及其竞争光失活过程中起着重要作用。特别是在荧光传感器和开关领域,人们认为(在许多情况下,没有令人信服的实验证据)分子内 PET 负责荧光猝灭。人们对荧光团的分子设计以及实现最佳激发/发射光谱、激发系数和荧光量子产率(对于生物成像目的非常重要)越来越感兴趣,但对基础机制研究的投入较少。在本综述中,我使用最先进的量子化学工具修订了其中一些系统中荧光猝灭的起源。这些研究超出了分析前沿轨道能图和进行 PET 热力学计算的常见策略。相反,使用含时密度泛函理论(TD-DFT)和完全活性空间自洽场(CASSCF)计算来探索最低激发态的势能面(PES),并使用热振动相关函数形式从第一性原理计算涉及激发态的辐射和非辐射衰减速率。通过这种策略,本工作揭示了荧光猝灭的真正起源,在此称为暗态猝灭。暗态(那些既不吸收也不发射光的态)通常难以通过实验探测,因此,计算研究可以为实际光失活机制提供新的见解。这种暗态猝灭机制已成功应用于各种荧光探针,包括质子、阳离子和阴离子靶标。此外,该机制提供了一个荧光猝灭的总体图景,包括分子内电荷转移(ICT)、比率猝灭以及那些被认为由 PET 引起的非辐射机制。最后,本综述首次提供了一种定量估计这种现象的计算方案,并为从第一性原理出发优化荧光探针的设计提供了要素。