dc.description.abstract |
This thesis deals with synthesis and characterization of functional materials derived from 1,8-
naphthalimide as potential candidates for electronic and biological applications. The thesis is
divided into seven chapters. Chapter 1 presents a review on structure-property relationship
highlighting photophysical, electrochemical, electroluminescent, photovoltaic, and biological
properties of mono and bis-naphthalimide-based linear and star-shaped molecules. Among the Nfunctionalized
and core functionalized dyes, later resulted in elongation of conjugation since the
chromophore at imidic position is orthogonal to the conjugating length. Depending upon the
behavior of chromophore flanked on naphthalimide, it exhibits either typical charge transfer or π-
π* extended conjugation. Bis-naphthalimides are explored for its application particularly in OSCs.
The variation in the central chromophore as planar or non-planar PAH or heteroaromatic core
resulted in tremendous alternation of photophysical and electrochemical properties. Star-shaped
dyes provide a platform to study the effect of chromophore density and molecular symmetry on
the optical properties of the dyes. However, effect of strength and variable number of electron
withdrawing groups on the properties of naphthalimide is not yet explored. The modulation of
aromatic core with different number of electron deficient units is limited. Also, the report on
studying the effect of non-conjugated chromophores on the intrinsic properties of naphthalimide
unit is narrow. In Chapter 2, the aim, scope and prospect of the work on naphthalimide-based
materials is presented.
Chapter 3 demonstrates the synthesis and characterization of bis-naphthalimides-based small
molecules and oligomers that helped us to study the effect of different electron withdrawing
acceptors and increasing number of benzotriazole unit on the properties. Linear and rigid bisnaphthalimide-
based electron deficient dyes were synthesized by Pd-catalyzed Sonogashira cross
coupling reaction. The dyes exhibit a red-shifted absorption band and enhanced molar extinction
coefficient attributable to the increase in π-conjugation length and enhanced electronic
interactions. The narrow structured emission band and small Stokes shifts is reflection of their
rigid and planar structure. Solvent polarity has a negligible influence on the optical properties of
the dyes. The molecules are prone for self-assembly leading to the formation of nanostructures for
the as synthesized samples and those obtained from different solvents. These dyes lead to the
formation of controlled morphologies of variable size and shape developed from J-aggregated
solid state packing. The fluorescence images observed under optical fluorescence microscopy
v
exhibits multicolor emission under different light source. Electrochemical studies reveal that these
dyes acquire LUMO levels in range of -3.2 to - 3.3 eV. The analysis of naphthalimide end-capped
benzotriazole-based linear n-type small molecular semiconductors show that with increasing
number of benzotriazole unit in the oligomer, LUMO is stabilized and HOMO is destabilized, thus
leading to narrow band gap. The electronic features and coplanar arrangement of functional
entities by density functional theoretical computations ensure close packing arrangement of
molecules in the solid state. Furthermore, these dyes show high thermal stability.
Chapter 4 deals with synthesis of pyrene-naphthalimide hybrids by Sonogashira coupling
reaction and presents the effects of substitution pattern on optical, electrochemical and thermal
properties. The attachment of the naphthalimide moiety is varied at the 1-, 3-, 6-, and 8-positions
of the pyrene ring to alter the intrinsic properties. The subtle modifications in the architecture of
dyes involving the substituent positioning, molecular symmetries and chromophore density as
predicted by theoretical computations greatly influence ground and excited state properties of the
functionalized pyrene compounds. The optical properties of these dyes change monotonically
from mono, di, tri to tetra substituted core. Among the two isomers 1,6-di-substituted and 1,8-disubstituted,
former display more red shifted absorption profile attributed to the extended linear
arrangement. The molar extinction coefficient increases from mono to tetra-substituted compound
attributed to the increment in chromophore density. Whereas, compared to the parent pyrene
molecule, the substituted cores induce a large bathochromic shift in the absorption profile owing
to the extension of conjugation. The compounds are green to orange fluorescent and display
dependence on solvent polarity confessing an intra molecular charge transfer in excited state. DFT
simulation reveals the probability of charge transfer from pyrene donor to naphthalimide acceptor
and thus the localization of HOMO/LUMO orbitals on the donor-acceptor moieties except for
tetra-substituted dye implying the significant charge transfer occurring during electronic
excitation.
Chapter 5 reports carbazole-naphthalimide-based linear donor-acceptor and star-shaped
triazine-cored molecules. A series of ethyne-linked compounds were synthesized by a stepwise
route involving a Pd/Cu catalyzed Sonogashira coupling reaction. Star-shaped dyes are
synthesized in two step initiated by acid catalyzed trimerization of arylnitriles to form triazine
core followed by coupling reaction. We highlight structure-property relationship by structural
modification of carbazole and/ or naphthalimide. The star-shaped triazine compounds displayed
superior optical, thermal and electrochemical properties when compared to linear analogs. These
vi
compounds act as blue to green light-emitting materials. The excited state lifetimes of linear
analogs are longer than star-shaped analogs. These fluorescent chromophores are supposed to be
potential candidates to acquire a space into organic electronic devices such as OSCs and OLEDs.
Chapter 6 describes the effect of imidic structural variation of naphthalimide-based bipolar
materials on photophysics, electrochemistry, morphology and its application in bioimaging. The
photophysical and electrochemical studies reveal that these dyes are electronically similar
although structurally different from each other. Whereas the structural variations helps to fine tune
the morphology of the dyes at microscopic level. They reflect unique and uniform morphology
depending on their molecular structure. They show considerably different morphology which is
solvent and concentration dependent. Finally, potential biological applications of these dyes are
evaluated by investigating their biocompatibilities and cell uptake behaviors.
Chapter 7 presents the conclusion and outlook of the work embodied in the thesis. We present
correlation between structural modification and optical properties of the naphthalimide-based
dyes. The influence of molecular tuning for determination of the properties and behavior of the
naphthalimide functional materials is addressed. |
en_US |