Web Release Date: January 19,
Symmetry Control of Radiative Decay in Linear Polyenes: Low Barriers for Isomerization in the S1 State of Hexadecaheptaene



and
Contribution from the Department of Chemistry, Bowdoin College, Brunswick, Maine 04011-8466, Department of Chemistry, 55 North Eagleville Road, University of Connecticut, Storrs, Connecticut 06269-3060, Department of Physics, Osaka City University, 3-3-138 Sugimoto, Sumiyoshi-ku, Osaka 558-8585, Japan, and "Light and Control" PRESTO/JST, 4-1-8 Honcho Kawaguchi, Saitama 332-0012, Japan
Received February 9, 2006

Abstract:
The room temperature absorption and emission spectra of the 4-cis and all-trans isomers of
2,4,6,8,10,12,14-hexadecaheptaene are almost identical, exhibiting the characteristic dual emissions S1
S0
(21Ag-
11Ag-) and S2
S0 (11Bu+
11Ag-) noted in previous studies of intermediate length polyenes and
carotenoids. The ratio of the S1
S0 and S2
S0 emission yields for the cis isomer increases by a factor of
~15 upon cooling to 77 K in n-pentadecane. In contrast, for the trans isomer this ratio shows a 2-fold
decrease with decreasing temperature. These results suggest a low barrier for conversion between the
4-cis and all-trans isomers in the S1 state. At 77 K, the cis isomer cannot convert to the more stable all-trans isomer in the 21Ag- state, resulting in the striking increase in its S1
S0 fluorescence. These experiments
imply that the S1 states of longer polyenes have local energy minima, corresponding to a range of
conformations and isomers, separated by relatively low (2-4 kcal) barriers. Steady state and time-resolved
optical measurements on the S1 states in solution thus may sample a distribution of conformers and
geometric isomers, even for samples represented by a single, dominant ground state structure. Complex
S1 potential energy surfaces may help explain the complicated S2
S1 relaxation kinetics of many
carotenoids. The finding that fluorescence from linear polyenes is so strongly dependent on molecular
symmetry requires a reevaluation of the literature on the radiative properties of all-trans polyenes and
carotenoids.
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