Abstract
Short-wave infrared region (SWIR; 900-2000 nm) enables in vivo bioimaging with unrivaled spatial and temporal resolution, but its full potential is locked behind the lack of highly emissive organic fluorophores. Their design remains a grand challenge and understanding the structure-property relationship is the key to their rational design. Here we investigate the effects of deuteration on the photophysical properties of a series of heptamethine (Cy7) dyes bearing different terminal heterocycles, the absorption of which spans the near-infrared (NIR) and SWIR regions. Using cheap deuterium sources, we demonstrate that deuteration is a strategy applicable across the Cy7 family that leads to enhanced quantum yields of fluorescence, longer-lived singlet excited states and suppressed rates of non-radiative deactivation processes. Jointly with exclusion of the central cyclohexenyl ring, the approach furnishes the brightest SWIR-emitting Cy7 fluorophore disclosed to this date.
Supplementary materials
Title
Deuteration of Heptamethine Cyanine Dyes Leads to Enhanced Emission Efficacy
Description
Deuteration of Heptamethine Cyanine Dyes Leads to Enhanced Emission Efficacy
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