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Dive into the research topics where Ksenija D. Glusac is active.

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Featured researches published by Ksenija D. Glusac.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2011

Negative polaron and triplet exciton diffusion in organometallic "molecular wires".

Julia M. Keller; Ksenija D. Glusac; Evgeny O. Danilov; Sean P. Mcilroy; Paiboon Sreearuothai; Andrew R. Cook; Hui Jiang; John R. Miller; Kirk S. Schanze

The dynamics of negative polaron and triplet exciton transport within a series of monodisperse platinum (Pt) acetylide oligomers is reported. The oligomers consist of Pt-acetylide repeats, [PtL(2)-C≡C-Ph-C≡C-](n) (where L = PBu(3) and Ph = 1,4-phenylene, n = 2, 3, 6, and 10), capped with naphthalene diimide (NDI) end groups. The Pt-acetylide segments are electro- and photoactive, and they serve as conduits for transport of electrons (negative polaron) and triplet excitons. The NDI end groups are relatively strong acceptors, serving as traps for the carriers. Negative polaron transport is studied by using pulse radiolysis/transient absorption at the Brookhaven National Laboratory Laser-Electron Accelerator Facility (LEAF). Electrons are rapidly attached to the oligomers, with some fraction initially residing upon the Pt-acetylide chains. The dynamics of transport are resolved by monitoring the spectral changes associated with transfer of electrons from the chain to the NDI end group. Triplet exciton transport is studied by femtosecond-picosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. Near-UV excitation leads to rapid production of triplet excitons localized on the Pt-acetylide chains. The excitons transport to the chain ends, where they are annihilated by charge separation with the NDI end group. The dynamics of triplet transport are resolved by transient absorption spectroscopy, taking advantage of the changes in spectra associated with decay of the triplet exciton and rise of the charge-separated state. The results indicate that negative polarons and excitons are transported rapidly, on average moving distances of ~3 nm in less than 200 ps. Analysis of the dynamics suggests diffusive transport by a site-to-site hopping mechanism with hopping times of ~27 ps for triplets and <10 ps for electrons.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2009

Electronic Properties of 4-Substituted Naphthalimides

Pavel Kucheryavy; Guifeng Li; Shubham Vyas; Christopher M. Hadad; Ksenija D. Glusac

This paper describes a study of excited-state properties of naphthalimide (NI) and four 4-substituted derivatives: 4-chloronaphthalimide (Cl-NI), 4-methylthionaphthalimide (MeS-NI), 4-nitronaphthalimide (O(2)N-NI), and 4-(N,N-dimethylaminonaphthalimide (Me(2)N-NI). Steady-state absorption and fluorescence spectra were collected in solvents of varying polarity to determine the excited-state character of NI derivatives. Furthermore, the excited-state dynamics were studied using femtosecond transient absorption spectroscopy. The experimental findings were compared to calculated data obtained using time-dependent density functional (TD-DFT) methods. We found that light absorption by all NI derivatives leads to the production of the second excited state (S(2)), which was found to have a n,pi* character. Within approximately 40 ps, the S(2) state undergoes internal conversion to produce the S(1) state. The S(1) state is relatively long-lived (approximately 4 ns) and has charge-transfer character in NI derivatives with electron-withdrawing and electron-donating groups (MeS-NI, O(2)N-NI, and Me(2)N-NI). In the case of NI and Cl-NI, the S(1) state has a pi,pi* character and undergoes intersystem crossing to produce the T(1) state within 400 ps.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2010

Photoinduced Charge Separation in Platinum Acetylide Oligomers

Chen Liao; James E. Yarnell; Ksenija D. Glusac; Kirk S. Schanze

The series of three donor-spacer-acceptor complexes, DPAF-Ptn-NDI, has been synthesized and characterized using time-resolved absorption spectroscopy. In these complexes, the donor is a (diphenylamino)-2,7-fluorenylene (DPAF) unit, the acceptor is a naphthalene diimide (NDI), and the spacers are a series of platinum acetylides of varying lengths, [-Pt(PBu(3))(2)-C≡C-Ph-C≡C-](n) (where Bu = n-butyl, Ph = 1,4-phenylene and n = 1, 2, and 3). Electrochemistry indicates that the DPAF-Ptn-NDI system has a charge transfer state at ca. 1.5 eV above the ground state that is based on one electron transfer from the DPAF donor to the NDI acceptor. Transient absorption spectroscopy on time scales ranging from 0.2 ps to 1 μs reveals that excitation of all of the complexes leads to production of the charge transfer state with nearly unit quantum efficiency. The rates for charge separation and charge recombination are not strongly dependent upon the length of the platinum acetylide spacer, suggesting that the spacer is actively involved in the electron (hole) transport processes. Analysis of the experimental results leads to a model in which charge separation and charge recombination occur by hole-hopping via states localized on the [-Pt(PBu(3))(2)-C≡C-Ph-C≡C-](n) bridge.


Chemistry: A European Journal | 2012

Nonlinear Absorbing Platinum(II) Diimine Complexes: Synthesis, Photophysics, and Reverse Saturable Absorption

Rui Liu; Dapeng Zhou; Alexander Azenkeng; Zhongjing Li; Yuhao Li; Ksenija D. Glusac; Wenfang Sun

A series of platinum(II) diimine complexes with different substituents on fluorenyl acetylide ligands (1a-1e) were synthesized and characterized. The influence of the auxiliary substituent on the photophysics of these complexes has been systematically investigated spectroscopically and theoretically (using density functional theory (DFT) methods). All complexes exhibit ligand-centered (1)π,π* transitions in the UV and blue spectral region, and broad, structureless (1)MLCT/(1)LLCT (1a, 1b, 1d and 1e) or (1)MLCT/(1)LLCT/(1)π,π* (1c) absorption bands in the visible region. All complexes are emissive in solution at room temperature, with the emitting state is tentatively assigned to mixed (3)MLCT/(3)π,π* states. The degree of (3)π,π* and (3)MLCT mixing varies with different substituents and solvent polarities. Complexes 1a-1e exhibit relatively strong singlet and triplet transient absorption from 450 to 800 nm, at which point reverse saturable absorption (RSA) could occur. Nonlinear transmission experiments at 532 nm by using nanosecond laser pulses demonstrate that 1a-1e are strong reverse saturable absorbers and could potentially be used as broadband nonlinear absorbing materials.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2009

Pinpointing the extent of electronic delocalization in the Re(I)-to-tetrazine charge-separated excited state using time-resolved infrared spectroscopy.

Guifeng Li; Kumar Parimal; Shubham Vyas; Christopher M. Hadad; Amar H. Flood; Ksenija D. Glusac

Femtosecond mid-IR transient absorption spectroscopy (TRIR) and time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations on Re(CO)(3)Cl(Me(2)BPTZ) [Me(2)BPTZ = 3,6-bis(5-methyl-2-pyridine)-1,2,4,5-tetrazine] are used to demonstrate that the lowest excited state of the complex is a triplet metal-to-ligand charge-transfer ((3)MLCT) state with a lifetime of 225 ps. The short excited-state lifetime is explained by the energy-gap law. Vibrational cooling of the (3)MLCT state shows up as early-time dynamics (3.6 ps). The structural changes in the excited state are deduced from the frequency shifts in the TRIR vibrational bands. The vibrational frequencies of the CO groups increase upon excitation as a result of decreased back-bonding between the CO ligands and the oxidized Re center in the (3)MLCT state. The vibrational frequencies of the central tetrazine ring of Me(2)BPTZ decrease because of the decrease in the bond order upon reduction of the Me(2)BPTZ ligand in the (3)MLCT state. Interestingly, the TRIR signals from the pyridine moieties of Me(2)BPTZ were not detected. These results can be explained by localization of the electronic charge on the central tetrazine ring in the (3)MLCT state of Re(CO)(3)Cl(Me(2)BPTZ), as supported by TD-DFT calculations.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2012

Tuning Photophysics And Nonlinear Absorption Of Bipyridyl Platinum(ii) Bisstilbenylacetylide Complexes By Auxiliary Substituents

Zhongjing Li; Ekaterina Badaeva; Dapeng Zhou; Josiah Bjorgaard; Ksenija D. Glusac; Svetlana Killina; Wenfang Sun

The photophysics of six bipyridyl platinum(II) bisstilbenylacetylide complexes with different auxiliary substituents are reported. These photophysical properties have been investigated in detail by UV-vis, photoluminescence (both at room temperature and at 77 K) and transient absorption (nanosecond and femtosecond) spectroscopies, as well as by linear response time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations. The photophysics of the complexes are found to be dominated by the singlet and triplet π,π* transitions localized at the stilbenylacetylide ligands with strong admixture of the metal-to-ligand (MLCT) and ligand-to-ligand (LLCT) charge-transfer characters. The interplay between the π,π* and MLCT/LLCT states depends on the electron-withdrawing or -donating properties of the substituents on the stilbenylacetylide ligands. All complexes exhibit remarkable reverse saturable absorption (RSA) at 532 nm for nanosecond laser pulses, with the complex that contains the NPh(2) substituent giving the strongest RSA and the complex with NO(2) substituent showing the weakest RSA.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2015

Diiodobodipy-styrylbodipy Dyads: Preparation and Study of the Intersystem Crossing and Fluorescence Resonance Energy Transfer

Zhijia Wang; Yun Xie; Kejing Xu; Jianzhang Zhao; Ksenija D. Glusac

2,6-Diiodobodipy-styrylbodipy dyads were prepared to study the competing intersystem crossing (ISC) and the fluorescence-resonance-energy-transfer (FRET), and its effect on the photophysical property of the dyads. In the dyads, 2,6-diiodobodipy moiety was used as singlet energy donor and the spin converter for triplet state formation, whereas the styrylbodipy was used as singlet and triplet energy acceptors, thus the competition between the ISC and FRET processes is established. The photophysical properties were studied with steady-state UV-vis absorption and fluorescence spectroscopy, electrochemical characterization, and femto/nanosecond time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopies. FRET was confirmed with steady state fluorescence quenching and fluorescence excitation spectra and ultrafast transient absorption spectroscopy (kFRET = 5.0 × 10(10) s(-1)). The singlet oxygen quantum yield (ΦΔ = 0.19) of the dyad was reduced as compared with that of the reference spin converter (2,6-diiodobodipy, ΦΔ = 0.85), thus the ISC was substantially inhibited by FRET. Photoinduced intramolecular electron transfer (ET) was studied by electrochemical data and fluorescence quenching. Intermolecular triplet energy transfer was studied with nanosecond transient absorption spectroscopy as an efficient (ΦTTET = 92%) and fast process (kTTET = 5.2 × 10(4) s(-1)). These results are useful for designing organic triplet photosensitizers and for the study of the photophysical properties.


Journal of Physical Chemistry A | 2010

Electronic Properties of N(5)-Ethyl Flavinium Ion

Vincent Sichula; Pavel Kucheryavy; Renat Khatmullin; Ying Hu; Ekaterina Mirzakulova; Shubham Vyas; Samuel F. Manzer; Christopher M. Hadad; Ksenija D. Glusac

We investigated the electronic properties of N(5)-ethyl flavinium perchlorate (Et-Fl(+)) and compared them to those of its parent compound, 3-methyllumiflavin (Fl). Absorption and fluorescence spectra of Fl and Et-Fl(+) exhibit similar spectral features, but the absorption energy of Et-Fl(+) is substantially lower than that of Fl. We calculated the absorption signatures of Fl and Et-Fl(+) using time-dependent density functional theory (TD-DFT) methods and found that the main absorption bands of Fl and Et-Fl(+) are (π,π*) transitions for the S(1) and S(3) excited states. Furthermore, calculations predict that the S(2) state has (n,π*) character. Using cyclic voltammetry and a simplistic consideration of the orbital energies, we compared the HOMO/LUMO energies of Fl and Et-Fl(+). We found that both HOMO and LUMO orbitals of Et-Fl(+) are stabilized relative to those in Fl, although the stabilization of the LUMO level was more pronounced. Visible and mid-IR pump-probe experiments demonstrate that Et-Fl(+) exhibits a shorter excited-state lifetime (590 ps) relative to that of Fl (several nanoseconds), possibly due to faster thermal deactivation in Et-Fl(+), as dictated by the energy gap law. Furthermore, we observed a fast (23-30 ps) S(2) → S(0) internal conversion in transient absorption spectra of both Fl and Et-Fl(+) in experiments that utilized pump excitations with higher energy.


Journal of the American Chemical Society | 2012

Mechanistic Study of the Photochemical Hydroxide Ion Release from 9-Hydroxy-10-methyl-9-phenyl-9,10-dihydroacridine

Dapeng Zhou; Renat Khatmullin; Janitha Walpita; Nicholas A. Miller; Hoi Ling Luk; Shubham Vyas; Christopher M. Hadad; Ksenija D. Glusac

The excited-state behavior of 9-hydroxy-10-methyl-9-phenyl-9,10-dihydroacridine and its derivative, 9-methoxy-10-methyl-9-phenyl-9,10-dihydroacridine (AcrOR, R = H, Me), was studied via femtosecond and nanosecond UV-vis transient absorption spectroscopy. The solvent effects on C-O bond cleavage were clearly identified: a fast heterolytic cleavage (τ = 108 ps) was observed in protic solvents, while intersystem crossing was observed in aprotic solvents. Fast heterolysis generates 10-methyl-9-phenylacridinium (Acr(+)) and (-)OH, which have a long recombination lifetime (no signal decay was observed within 100 μs). AcrOH exhibits the characteristic behavior needed for its utilization as a chromophore in the pOH jump experiment.


Journal of Physical Chemistry B | 2015

DiiodoBodipy-Rhodamine Dyads: Preparation and Study of the Acid-Activatable Competing Intersystem Crossing and Energy Transfer Processes

Kejing Xu; Yun Xie; Xiaoneng Cui; Jianzhang Zhao; Ksenija D. Glusac

Iodo-bodipy/rhodamine dyads with cyanuric chloride linker were prepared with the goal of achieving pH switching of the triplet excited state formation. The pH switching takes advantage of the acid-activated reversible cyclic lactam↔opened amide transformation of the rhodamine unit and the fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET). The photophysical properties of the dyads were studied with steady-state and femtosecond/nanosecond time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopies, electrochemical methods, as well as TD-DFT calculations. Our results show that the model dyad is an efficient triplet state generator under neutral condition, when the rhodamine unit adopts the closed form. The triplet generation occurs at the iodo-bodipy moiety and the triplet state is long-lived, with a lifetime of 51.7 μs. In the presence of the acid, the rhodamine unit adopts an opened amide form, and in this case, the efficient FRET occurs from iodo-bodipy to the rhodamine moiety. The FRET is much faster (τFRET = 81 ps) than the intersystem crossing of iodo-bodipy (τISC = 178 ps), thus suppressing the triplet generation is assumed. However, we found that the additional energy transfer occurs at the longer timescale, which eventually converts the rhodamine-based S1 state to the T1 state localized on the iodo-bodipy unit.

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Dapeng Zhou

Bowling Green State University

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Ekaterina Mirzakulova

Bowling Green State University

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Renat Khatmullin

Bowling Green State University

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Stefan Ilic

Bowling Green State University

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Kirk S. Schanze

University of Texas at San Antonio

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Yun Xie

Bowling Green State University

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Guifeng Li

Bowling Green State University

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