J. Phys. Chem. A, 106 (34), 7655 -7663, 2002. 10.1021/jp0204915 S1089-5639(02)00491-7
Web Release Date: July 31, 2002

Copyright © 2002 American Chemical Society

Excited-State Intramolecular Proton Transfer in 2-(2'-Tosylaminophenyl)benzimidazole

Christoph J. Fahrni,* Maged M. Henary, and Donald G. VanDerveer

School of Chemistry of Biochemistry, Georgia Institute of Technology, 770 State Street, Atlanta, Georgia 30332

Received: February 21, 2002

In Final Form: April 30, 2002

Abstract:

The spectroscopic properties of 2-(2'-tosylaminophenyl)benzimidazole (TPBI) have been studied in a series of different solvents. As revealed by absorbance, steady-state, and time-resolved emission spectroscopy, the molecule undergoes fast excited-state intramolecular proton transfer (ESIPT) to yield emission of the corresponding tautomeric species with a large quantum yield (0.5). The fluorescence emission shows monoexponential decay kinetics ( = 4.5 ns) regardless of the nature of the solvent. The ground-state equilibrium is dominated by a single rotamer and small amounts of the deprotonated anion. The X-ray structure of TPBI shows a substantial out-of-plane twist along the aryl-benzimidazole bond axis, which is presumably due to -stacking interactions between the tosylamide and benzimidazole rings. Ab initio calculations suggest a different structure in the gas phase without -stacking interactions and a substantially reduced twist angle. A large energy barrier for interconversion of the cis- and trans-rotamers in the ground and excited state has been predicted on the basis of DFT calculations, which is in agreement with all experimental data. The ground-state equilibrium and ESIPT process of TPBI are essentially unaffected by the nature of the solvent, which is of particular interest to sensing applications in cell biology.


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