RESUMEN
The relaxation mechanism of electronically excited states of host-guest complexes between cucurbiturils (CB) and pyridinium styryl dyes is considered in detail on the basis of the recent results obtained by the up-conversion fluorescence technique. The addition of CB to aqueous dye solutions increases the longest fluorescence decay times from about 50 ps for the free dyes to 100-150 ps for the bound ones. This is attributed to the braking of intramolecular rotations around the single bonds of the styryl moiety that is provided by guest's displacement inside the cavity, whose driving force is a Coulombic interaction of the styryl dye cation and negatively charged CB portals. This displacement, a translational movement along the CB axis, is associated with the observed decay time of about 1 ps. There is also a characteristic time of about 100 fs, attributed to vibrational relaxation. In fact, such complexes can operate as a molecular machine, the molecular switch.
RESUMEN
The photophysical properties of aqueous solution of styryl dye, 4-[(E)-2-(3,4-dimethoxyphenyl)ethenyl]-1-ethylpyridinium perchlorate (dye 1), in the presence of cucurbit[7]uril (CB[7]) was studied by means of fluorescence spectroscopy methods. The production of 1:1 host-guest complexes in the range of CB[7] concentrations up to 16 µM with K = 1.0 × 10(6) M(-1) has been observed, which corresponds to appearance of the isosbestic point at 396 nm in the absorption spectra and a 5-fold increase in fluorescence intensity. The decay of fluorescence was found to fit to double-exponential functions in all cases; the calculated average fluorescence lifetime increases from 145 to 352 ps upon the addition of CB[7]. Rotational relaxation times of dye 1 solutions 119 ± 14 ps without CB[7] and 277 ± 35 ps in the presence of CB[7] have been determined by anisotropy fluorescence method. The comparison of the results of quantum-chemical calculations and experimental data confirms that in the host cavity dye 1 rotates as a whole with CB[7].