Abstract
Pyrene derivatives play a prominent role in organic electronic devices,
including field effect transistors, light emitting diodes, and solar
cells. The flexibility in the desired properties has previously been
achieved by variation of substituents at the periphery of the pyrene
backbone. In contrast, the influence of the topology of the central
pi-electron system on the relevant properties such as the band gap or
the fluorescence behavior has not yet been addressed. In this work,
pyrene is compared with its structural isomer azupyrene, which has a
pi-electron system with nonalternant topology. Using photoelectron
spectroscopy, near edge X-ray absorption fine structure spectroscopy,
and other methods, it is shown that the electronic band gap of azupyrene
is by 0.72 eV smaller than that of pyrene. The difference of the
optical band gaps is even larger with 1.09 eV, as determined by
ultraviolet–visible absorption spectroscopy. The nonalternant nature of
azupyrene is also associated with a more localized charge distribution,
as can be seen in 1H and 13C nuclear magnetic resonance shifts, as well
as the C1s core-level shifts. Further insight is provided by density
functional theory (DFT) calculations of the molecular properties and ab
initio coupled cluster calculations of the optical transitions. The
concept of aromaticity is used to interpret DFT-based structures and for
the theoretical assignment of the vibrational modes of the infrared
spectra, where major topology-related differences are apparent.
Supplementary materials
Title
2021 01 10 Klein AzPyr MatC supporting final ChemRxiv
Description
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