Two-photon absorption reveals low-energy excited states of a 2,5,8-triamino-heptazine chromophore

Abstract

Triamino-heptazines (TAH's) comprise the fundamental building blocks of graphitic carbon nitride, an alluring material with promising applications in optoelectronics. However, the core D3h molecular symmetry enforces a forbidden lowest-energy excited singlet state, making it a challenge to characterize via conventional spectroscopy. Here, we measure oneand two-photon absorption spectra of an acidic form of triamino-heptazine, 3H-TAH, and use reversible acid/base titration to further probe the symmetry of the low-energy transitions in aqueous solution, which suggests the molecular base structure is dimelem. Two-photon absorption reveals two distinct low-energy transitions in acidic conditions, both of which are one-photon forbidden. The lowest energy state additionally becomes one-photon allowed in basic conditions. Spectroscopic changes can be described according to chromophore symmetry switching, with C3h, D3h, or Cs point group symmetry in respective acidic, neutral, or basic environments.

Description

Keywords

two-photon absorption, forbidden transition, triamino-heptazine, dimelem, symmetry switching

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Creative Commons license

Except where otherwised noted, this item's license is described as Copyright SPIE 2024
Copyright (c) 2002-2022, LYRASIS. All rights reserved.