Synthesis and Optical Characterization of a Rhodamine B Spirolactam Dimer

18 April 2022, Version 2

Abstract

Amide derivatives of xanthene dyes such as rhodamine B are useful in a variety of sensing applications due to their colorimetric responses to stimuli such as acidity changes and UV light. The optical properties of these molecules can be influenced by intermolecular associations into dimeric structures, but the exact impact can be hard to predict. We have designed a covalently linked intramolecular dimer of the dye rhodamine B utilizing p-phenylene diamine to link the two dyes via amide bonds. The doubly closed spirolactam version of this dimer, RSL2, is isolated as a colorless solid. Under acidic conditions or UV exposure, RSL2 solutions develop a pink color that is expected for the ring-opened form of the molecule. However, NMR and single crystal diffraction data show that the equilibrium still prefers the closed dimer state. Interestingly, the emission profile of RSL2 shows solvatochromic blue fluorescence. Control studies of model compounds with similar structural motifs do not display similar blue fluorescence, indicating that this optical behavior is unique to the dimeric form. This behavior may lend itself to applications of such xanthene dimers to more sophisticated sensors beyond those with traditional binary on/off fluorescence profiles.

Keywords

xanthene dyes
spirolactams
fluorescence
photoswitching
rhodamine
solvatochromic

Supplementary materials

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Description
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Title
Stratton et al. Supporting Information
Description
Additional tables and figures related to 1H NMR and 13C NMR spectra of RSL2 and RSL2-4HCl, HPLC traces of RSL2, absorbance and fluorescence spectra in additional solvents and of rhodamine B and control molecules, computational data and crystallographic data.
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