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Donatas Zigmantas. Portrait.

Donatas Zigmantas

Professor

Donatas Zigmantas. Portrait.

Effect of a conjugated carbonyl group on the photophysical properties of carotenoids

Author

  • Donatas Zigmantas
  • R G Hiller
  • F P Sharples
  • H A Frank
  • Villy Sundström
  • Tomas Polivka

Summary, in English

Effects of introducing a carbonyl group into the conjugation system of carotenoids were studied for four naturally occurring carotenoids: peridinin, fucoxanthin, siphonaxanthin and spheroidenone. The conjugated carbonyl group affects energetics and dynamics of all these carotenoids in a similar way, although the magnitude of the changes depends strongly on the carotenoid structure. Firstly, presence of a carbonyl group considerably narrows the S-1/ICT-S-2 gap, and this effect does not depend on polarity. The S-1/ICT energies of carotenoids were measured by recording S-1/ICT-S-2 spectral profiles in the near-infrared region and the resulting energies were 16100 cm(-1) for peridinin, 16520 cm(-1) for fucoxanthin and 16610 cm(-1) for siphonaxanthin. Narrowing of the S-1/ICT-S-2 gap has important consequences for functionality of these carotenoids in light-harvesting systems of oceanic organisms. since while the S, state is red-shifted to capture green light, the S-1/ICT state is still high enough to transfer energy to chlorophyll. The S-1/ICT energy of spheroidenone was determined to be 13000 cm(-1) Secondly the carbonyl group introduces some polarity-dependent effects: (1) polarity-induced change of the S-1/ICT lifetime. When changing from nonpolar to polar solvent, the S-1/ICT lifetime is changed from 160 to 8.5 ps for peridinin, from 60 to 30 ps for fucoxanthin, from 60 to 20 ps for fucoxanthin, while for the longer carotenoid spheroidenone the S-1/ICT lifetime remains 6 ps regardless of solvent polarity. This effect is explained in terms of stabilizatior of charge-transfer character of both ground and excited states. (2) stabilization of the charge-transfer character in polar solvents is also demonstrated by appearance of new polarity-induced bands in the transient absorption spectra. (3) polarity-induced changes of the ground state are manifested by asymmetric broadening of the absorption spectrum accompanied by a loss of vibrational structure.

Department/s

  • Chemical Physics

Publishing year

2004

Language

English

Pages

3009-3016

Publication/Series

Physical Chemistry Chemical Physics

Volume

6

Issue

11

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Royal Society of Chemistry

Topic

  • Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 1463-9084