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Antiaromatic bisindeno-[n]thienoacenes with small singlet biradical characters: syntheses, structures and chain length dependent physical properties

Authors :
Jingjing Chang
Bin Zheng
Juan T. López Navarrete
Kuo-Wei Huang
Gaole Dai
Dongho Kim
Wen-Hua Zhang
Sangsu Lee
Chunyan Chi
Xueliang Shi
Juan Casado
Paula Mayorga Burrezo
Source :
Chem. Sci.. 5:4490-4503
Publication Year :
2014
Publisher :
Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC), 2014.

Abstract

Recent studies demonstrated that aromaticity and biradical character play important roles in determining the ground-state structures and physical properties of quinoidal polycyclic hydrocarbons and oligothiophenes, a kind of molecular materials showing promising applications for organic electronics, photonics and spintronics. In this work, we designed and synthesized a new type of hybrid system, the so-called bisindeno-[n]thienoacenes (n = 1–4), by annulation of quinoidal fused α-oligothiophenes with two indene units. The obtained molecules can be regarded as antiaromatic systems containing 4n π electrons with small singlet biradical character (y0). Their ground-state geometry and electronic structures were studied by X-ray crystallographic analysis, NMR, ESR and Raman spectroscopy, assisted by density functional theory calculations. With extension of the chain length, the molecules showed a gradual increase of the singlet biradical character accompanied by decreased antiaromaticity, finally leading to a highly reactive bisindeno[4]thienoacene (S4-TIPS) which has a singlet biradical ground state (y0 = 0.202). Their optical and electronic properties in the neutral and charged states were systematically investigated by one-photon absorption, two-photon absorption, transient absorption spectroscopy, cyclic voltammetry and spectroelectrochemistry, which could be correlated to the chain length dependent antiaromaticity and biradical character. Our detailed studies revealed a clear structure–aromaticity–biradical character–physical properties–reactivity relationship, which is of importance for tailored material design in the future.

Details

ISSN :
20416539 and 20416520
Volume :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Chem. Sci.
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........56f576a910e9a1974cbdf80b01268feb
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1039/c4sc01769b