Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1408775 | Journal of Molecular Structure | 2013 | 5 Pages |
Tetra-propyl-porphycene (TPrPo) in solution has been studied by means of time-and spectral-resolved near-infrared (NIR) luminescence spectroscopy. The NIR luminescence kinetics exhibits surprising dependence on oxygen concentration. There is a clearly visible long-lived (microsecond range) rise-section in biexponential kinetics at broad NIR spectral range of 800–1100 nm for lowered oxygen concentrations. The rise-section is not present in nitrogen-saturated samples and it also disappears after addition of singlet oxygen (1O2) physical quencher DABCO, which means that the effect is 1O2-mediated. Kinetics of TPrPo delayed fluorescence detected around 650 nm possess a similar rise-decay character in microsecond range. Simultaneous measurements of 1O2 phosphorescence kinetics, triplet–triplet transient absorption, and delayed fluorescence have provided additional information about the phenomenon. It is proposed that TPrPo shows a singlet oxygen-sensitized delayed fluorescence which extends to near-infrared where it is strong enough to override the phosphorescence emission.