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Merck

Laser flash photolysis study of triphenylimidazole.

Spectrochimica acta. Part A, Molecular and biomolecular spectroscopy (2000-05-16)
A C Testa
ABSTRACT

Laser flash photolysis of the photocyclization of triphenylimidazole (TPI) in ethyl alcohol at 308 nm. indicates that the dihydrophenanthroimidazole (DHPI) intermediate is produced rapidly, has a lifetime of 0.25 ms, and returns predominantly back to triphenylimidazole. Analysis of the decay channels for this intermediate indicates two rate constants: (1) k1 = 3.3 x 10(3) s(-1), associated with reversion back to triphenylimidazole and (2) k2 = 0.67 x 10(2) s(-1), which is associated with the conversion of the dihydrophenanthroimidazole to the photoproduct, 2-phenyl-9,10-phenanthroimidazole. The photoproduct is readily observed as an increasing component in the biexponential fluorescence decay data. Fluorescence lifetimes for triphenylimidazole and 2-phenyl-9,10-phenanthroimidazole (PPI) in ethyl alcohol were determined to be 1.76 and 8.21 ns, respectively, with no additional components in the fluorescence decay as the photochemistry proceeds. An additional transient absorption observed in the 450 nm. region, with a lifetime of 0.7 micros, decaying faster than the dihydrophenanthroimidazole intermediate, is assigned to the triplet state of triphenylimidazole.