Acts, Vol. 32A, pp. 1083to 1088. Pergamon Press,1976. Printedin Northern Ireland
Spectrochimica
Optical spectra of Ni porphin, Pd porphin and free base porphin in single crystal triphenylene* JOSEPH BORANDY and BORIS F. KIM Applied Physics Laboratory, The Johns Hopkins University, 8621 Georgia Avenue, Silver Spring, MD 20910, U.S.A. (Received 27 May 1975) Abstract-Polarized optical absorption spectra and luminescence spectra of palladium porphin, nickel porphin, and porphin free base doped into triphenylene host crystals have been obtained. The da metalloporphin spectra obtained hers allow a aomparison to be made with other metalloporphin spectra reported previously from this laboratory and suggest a general description of the polarized absorption spectra of metalloporphins in this host. The observation of many spectral lines which ocour at the same wavelength in absorption and fluoresoencesuggests thet bend I of free base porphin may be of greater complexity than previously thought. INTRODUCTION
and only absorption
in Nip.
Luminescence
ob-
Most spectroscopic studies of porphyrins have been
served in the NiP sample turned out to be a CUP
done either of solutions or of polycrystalline
impurity.
ples of porphyrins (usually
called
Shpol’skii
primary disadvantages polarization
sam-
spectra).
and VO while the high resolution FBP spectra are
of the
of special
of these methods is that the
characteristics
be obtained directly.
One
interest
in light
of recent
resonance
Raman spectra of FBP [7] which indicate that band
of the spectra cannot
This leboratory
These studies allow the d3 metdlopor-
phins to be compared with each other and to Zn, Cu
in frozen normal hydrocarbons
IV contains at least 3 pure electronic transit’ions.
has recently
reported optical spectra of zinc porphin (ZnP) [l], copper porphin (VOP)
(CUP) [2], and vanadyl
[2] in host crystals
material
is crystalline
EXPERIMENTAL
porpbin
of triphenylene.
This
at room temperature
and
polarized spectra were easily obtained. Shpol’skii
or quasiline absorption
and lumine-
scence spectra of free base porpbin (FBP) palladium reported
porphin by
(PdP)
Russian
[3] and
[4] at 77OK have been
workers.
EAS~WOOD and
GOUTERMAN [5] obtained phosphorescence
spectra
of PdP in nonane and report &,, and &?Iabsorption peaks
for NIP
glycolate). cence
of
in MPEG
(methylphthalylethyl-
CALLIS et aE. [6] also observed fluoresPdP
in
MMA
(methylmetbacrylate).
Quasiline spectra of nickel porphins
(Nip)
do not
appear to have been published. As part of our continued
effort in the spectros-
copy of porphyrins, we have obtained the polarized optical absorption spectra, a.s well as luminescence spectra, of FBP and the d* metalloporphins, and Nip, stals.
incorporated
Absorption
in FBP,
into triphenylene
PdP
host cry-
and fluorescence were observed
absorption
and phosphorescence
* Work supported by the Naval Sea Command under contract KO0017-72-C-4401.
in PdP, Systems
The absorption and luminescence spectra were taken photographically on e one-meter, f/8 JarrellAsh Spectrograph with a first order resolution of 0.15 A and dispersion of 7.5 &mm and on 8 60 cm, f/8 spectrograph having resolution and dispersion of 0.5 A and 16 &mm, respectively. Kodak contrast process film and high speed i.r. film were used. The spect,ra, of iron and neon were used for wavelength measurements. Luminescence was excited with a GE AH-6 mercury discharge lamp. Triphenylene is an orthorhombic crystal with a space group of P2,2,2, [8]. The crystals grow in the form of needles with the long dimension being the crystallographic c-axis. Small crystals of triphenylene doped with FBP, PdP, and NIP having good optical quality were grown by evaporation techniques. The crystals were typically 1 mm X 1 mm in cross section and 6 mm in length. The porphin compounds were purchased from the Mad River Chemical Company (now defunct). The crystals were immersed directly into liquid nitrogen or liquid helium for the low temperature observations. The c-axis of the crystal was vertical and ?r and o polarization means that the electric vector of the incident light wss parallel and perpendicular to c, respectively. Single crystal samples were used in all cases but polarized luminescence spectra were not taken.
1083
J. BOHANDY and B. F. Kriv~
1084 RESULTS
Q.
(a) Free base porphin single crystals
proximately
Many
was considerable.
125 sharp absorption
served in the vicinity
Ap-
lines were ob-
of bands I and II.
While
the cm-’
strongest
P-polarized
1325 cm-l,
graphic
sharp absorption lines were polarized with respect to the c-axis of triphenylene.
Furthermore,
were several lines on the long wavelength band I which were predominantly Approximately
there side of
o-polarized.
region between
of PdP
exposures
6172 A and
while
1281
vibration.
in MMA,
at 4.2’K
fluorescence in PdP/TP.
In
long photo-
did not
reveal any
No attempt was made to
observe delayed fluorescence at room temperature. A
relatively
strong
served in NiP/TP
110 sharp fluorescence lines were
vibrations
e-polarized
in are
CALLIS et al. [B] report room tempera-
of bands III
but not all, of the
and 1411 cm-l
in
respectively.
Although
ture fluorescence
Many,
prevalent
these same vibrations are 1014, 1352 and
only broad, diffuse bands were seen in the region and IV.
lines are apparent vibration
1028 cm-l
is the strongest
NiP/TP,
these sharp lines had a width on the order of 1 A,
seen in the spectral
vibronic
with a 385 cm-r
both polarizations.
The increase in spectral resolution with the use of doped
band.
PdP/TP
comparison
phosphorescence
at 4.2’K.
was
However,
with the phosphorescence
ob-
a careful of CuP/TP
[2] showed that the NIP spectrum was actually a
7158 A. Obvious multiplets were not observed in CUP impurity. PdP/TP exhibited a strong phosthe single crystal sample, contrary to SEVCE~ENEO phorescence at 77OK and 4.2%. Figure 3 shows et al. [3] who report triplets in the quasiline absorptypical spectra. Only broad bands were seen at 77’K tion snd fluorescence spectra of FBP in octane. with the peaks of these bands at vibretional freNote, however, that triplets were observed in the
quencies which correspond to vibrations reported
fluorescence spectra of polycrystalline
for PdP in octane [4].
FBP/TP
[9].
Furthermore,
samples of
there are slight dis-
O-Ophosphorescence
A 180 cm-l splitting of the band at15,282
cm-1 (6642 A)
crepancies in fluorescent wavelengths
of the single
at 77OKwas not observed. Such a splitting was seen
crystal
of FBP/TP
in PdP in nonane by EASTWOOD and GOUTERMAN
and
the
and
polycrystalline
polycrystalline
samples
samples
had
somewhat
[5].
At 4.2’K,
multiple&
consisting of sharp lines
in the spectrum
in place of the bands.
broader lines. This could be due to a concentration
appear
effect.
There appears to be a quintet of lines (separated
The most interesting and important
point to be
by approximately
19, 32, 38 and 13 cm-l)
which
made regarding the free base specta can be seen in
repeat at 397, 805, 1334, 1605 and 2002 cm-r from
Fig.
the O-O
1 which shows absorption and fluorescence One sees that many
spectra in the region of band I.
of the lines (28 to be exact) occur at the samewavelength in absorption
and fluorescence.
Assuming
transition
lines are week, Tables
1 and 2 list the absorption
phorescence
singlet electronic state, this implies that all of these
with the FBP/TP,
lines are from
not been tabulated.
pure electronic
transitions.
The
Some of the
and are not shown in
Fig. 3 nor listed in Table 2.
that fluorescence occurs from the lowest excited
presence of these lines made it very difficult to pick
at 15329 cm-‘.
however,
lines of PdP/TP
and
and phos-
NiP/TP.
As
many of the weaker lines have A complete
list is available
upon request.
out vibrational frequencies because of the ambiguity in the O-O
transition.
The
stronger
and fluorescence lines of FBP/TP Tables
1 and 2.
absorption
DISCUSSION
absorption
are tabulated
in
Transitions which occur in both
and fluorescence are marked
with an
asterisk.
Figure 4 shows a “stick” PdP/TP
and NiP/TP,
CuP/TP
and VOP/TP
The polarized
which were reported previ-
NiP in triphenylene (PdP/TP are shown features
[l, 21. Both Pd and Ni
have ds electron configurations absorption
in Fig.
2.
spectra
of PdP
and NiP/TP)
One sees that
of the two metalloporphins
and
at 77’K the gross
are similar
similar spectra.
and should have
Figures 2 and 4 show this to be
true, in general, but PdP exhibits many more and much sharper lines.
In fact, one can see that aside
from linewidth and spectral resolution,
but that much sharper lines and greater resolution
metalloporphins
are observed in PdP.
other and suggests
As with the other metallopor-
spectra of
along with those of ZnP/TP,
ously from this laboratory (b) PdP and NIP
diagram of the st,ronger
transitions in the polarized absorption
have
all of the
gross similarities
a general description
each
of the
phins in this host [ 1, 21, there are some unpolarized
spectra of metalloporphins
lines and lines on the long wavelength
vicinity of the Q,, band, there is a strong o-polarized
side of the
in triphenylene.
to
In the
lf
W
$615 5608 5564 5.528 5429 5397 5369 5355 5286 5262 5247 $201 5172 5142 5113 5105 5077 5032 5015 4966 4921
5216,
: W 10 2 W
I;:
: 3 1
W i 2 10 LO W 3
W
I
1?1;04 17827 17968 18085 18414 18524 18620 18669 18913 18999 19053 19222 19329 19442 19552 19583 19691 19867 19935 20131 20315
77°K
r4
.
(a) PdP lines at 5436, 5323, and 4981 were not polarized.
w W W 10 W 1 4 w 1 10 8 W 1 W 3 W
5583 5522 5477 5420 5414 5373 5309 5197 5180 SO68 SOS9 SO43 5007 4991 4962 4872
17&l? 18104 18253 18445 18465 18606 18831 19237 19300 19726 19761 19824 19966 20030 20148 20520
I
P#,TP(~)
I
0
$157,
.J 5452 5346 5085 4980
5130.
I 10 1 8 5
Nip/T
5093,
18;37 18701 19661 20073
0
5025,
A 5404 5297 5227 5123 SO36
77’K 18;OO 18875 19126 19513 19851
n I 10 1 1 8 8 l&3 6&2* 15326 6523.1 6506.7* 15365 6496.0, 15390 6486.5* 15412 6472.7* 15445 6470.1 15451 15619 6400.5 6397.4* 15627 6373-l* 15687 6364.2* 15708 6359.5’ 15720 6252.6 15989 6230.9* 16045 6228. .5* 16051 6226.0’ 16057 6223.1’ 16065 6218.9* 16075 6101.3 16385 6030.0 16579 5957.4 16781 16984 5886.3 5876.3 17013 5872.1 17025 5839.3 17121 5811.9 17201 5808.8 17210 17236 5801.3 5748.1 17392 5742.3 17410 5718.7 17482 5710.8 17506 5498.6 17543 5641.0 17722 5635.8 17739 5630.6 17755 5564.3 17967 5538.6 18050
a
: 2 2 2 1 10 1 4 4 4 1 10 2 7 2 0 2 10 3 3 5 2 7 4 s 2 2 5 7 8 7 2 6 4 10 2 3 3 6191.1* 5914.6 5858.7 5797.5 5792.9 5785.2 5672.6 5668.7 5625 .O
A
16148 16903 17064 17244 17258 17’184 17624 17636 17773
n *
FBP/TP - 4.2OK
Table 1. Energy levels and relative intensities of PdP, Nil?, and FBP in triphenylene
I 8 8 2 3 4 5 8 3 3 tx * * 6057.3 5930.7 5887.7 5867.8 5832; S 5825.1 5816.0 5778 t 5 5776.3 5765.0 57S9.9 5753.6 5?39:6 5735.9 5731.3 5730.7 5690.4 5683.0 5664.0 5657.0 5652.5 5647.7 5644.5 5620.0
6446.2* 6422.6* 6407.?* 6384.3* 6378.1* 6376.7. 6315.9* 6300.9 6266.6. 6211.5*
x
l&9 15566 15602 15659 15674 15678 15829 15866 15953 16095 16180 16196 16504 16857 16980 17037 17141 17162 17189 17301 17307 17341 17357 17376 17418 17429 17443 17445 17569 17591 17650 17672 17686 17701 17711 17789
u
2” 3 4 31 4
1’0 2 10 2 2 2 4 5 4 5 5 5 S 7 3 2 2 2 2 2 2
I 44 10 10 1 1 1 10
1086
J. BOHANDY and B. F. KIM Table 2. Luminescence spoct;ra of PdP and FBP in triphenylene
PdP/TP - 4.2'K A I 6521.8 153;9** 10 7 6529.9 15310 9 6532.0 15305 3 6535.0 15298 3 6537.1 15293 1 6540.8 15284 6545.6 15273 8 4 6550.3 15262 3 6552.3 15258 6562.1 15235 5 6566.8' 15224 2 6571.9 15212 1 6638.0 15061 1 6695.3 14932** 1 6703.5 14914 2 6717.8 14882 2 6734.8 14844 1 6858.8 14576 1 6863.1 14567 2 6883.4 14524** 1 6892.9 14504 1 W 6908.2 14472 7143.3 13995** 2 7153.1 13976 5 1 7156.7 13969 7159.7 13963 1. 7169.5 13944 4 7189.1 13906 1 7195.6 13894 1 7284.7 13724** 2 7294.2 13706 5 7298.0 13699 1 7304.5 13686 1 4 7310.7 13675 7331.0 13637 1 7337.7 13625 1
PdP/TP - 77°K h I 6542 15;82 10 6720 14877 2 6886 .I4518 3 7024 14233 1 7174 13935 5 7303 13689 6 7531 13275 W 7708 12970 W
FBP/TP - 4.2'K x I 16;96 6504.3 16181 ; 6506.3* 16148 7' 6515.0 16095 10 6520.5 16076 4 6523.2* 2 6553.9* 16063 16057 1 6582.8 16051 3 6606.3 16049 2 6650.8 16044 6 6662.6 16040 3 6679.6 15953 5 6697.8 15829 6704.2 5 15813 2 6709.5 15720 8 6722.1 15709 4 6723.7 15687 6757.8 2 15678 1 6776.2 ',15675 1 6800.5 15659 3 6805.9 15627 3 6834.4 15608 3 6852.2 15602 10 6858.0 15566 4 6876.3 15534 5 6878.3 15528 3 6885.8 15508 8 6902.8 15488 2 6907 .O 15481 3 6912.0 15476 3 6915.4 15458 2 6921.0 15452 1 6946.6 15445 7 7031.4 15438 7 7058.1 15411 5 7085.9 15390 8 7146.2 7157.6
x 6172.5* 6178.2* 6191.1* 6211.4* 6218.7' 6223.7* 6225.9* 6228.S* 6229.2 6231.1* 6232.5 6266.6* 6315.8* 6322.3 6359.4* 6363.9* 6373.0* 6376.4* 6377.9* 6384.4* 6397.2* 6405.2 6407.8* 6!22.6* 6435.6 6438.2 6446.4* 6454.6 6457.7 6459.7 6467.2 6470.0* 6472.6* 6475.9 6486.9* 6496.1*
15v370 15368 15345 15332 15326 15254 15187 15133 15032 15005 14967 14926 14912 14900 14872 14869 14807 14753 14701 14689 14628 14590 14578 14538 14535 14519 14483 14474 14464 14456 14445 14391 14218 14164 14109 13989 13967
I 4 3 2 2 2 8 2 3 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 2 3 3 2 2 4 3 3 3 4 6 2 4 ? 2 2 2 2 2 4 3 _
*Seen in absorption and fluorescence. **Leading line of a repeating quintet. See text. line,
denotedby Q,",and & strong rr-polarized line,
et al. [ll]
who report a 30 cm-l
denoted by Q,,“, with a separation QOy-QoG on the On the basis of arguments order of 200 cm-l.
PdP in m-octane.
given in [2], this energy difference between QO’ and
1300 cm-l
Qo2 is interpreted as a crystal field reduction of the
further to the blue.
usual DJh metalloporphyrin
strong
symmetry
the subsequent removal of degeneracy. for Q,,*-Q,” is approximately 79 cm-1
for
respectively.
ZnP,
CUP,
Support
to D,, with The value
300,210,180,163 VOP,
NiP
and
for this interpretation
and PdP, has
0
spectrum
One
has
doublet
can
for
a
strong
line
approximately
Q,,’ and a weaker line 400 cm-l
from
approximately
separation
In the spectral region of QI, the
The r spectrum consists of a
whose
separations
from
1000 and 1350 cm-l,
easily
see that
these
coalesce into the structureless
Qoy are
respectively.
features
woulcl
Q0 and Q1 bands
usually observed in unpolarized room temperature
who report a
solution spectra.
Indeed,
109 cm-1 separation between Qoy and Q,,” for ZnP
phinltriphenylene
dissolved in solution yield such
in n-octane crystals and very recently by CANTERS
spectra.
been given by CANTERS et al. [lo]
crystals
of metallopor-
However, one sees evidence that the metal
1087
Optical spectra of Ni porphin, Pd porphin and free baso porphin
;-.
,.“,
,.,
.~(%
_,
,,
model: ‘It was hoped that further experimental
formation O-O
band of PdP/TP
4.2’K,
multiplets
earlier.
in-
on this point could be obtained but the at 77“K was not split and at
were
observed
as
The lack of phosphorescence
is consistent with experimental
[5] and theoretical
[12] work on nickel porphyrins. planation
discussed in NiP/TP
The tentative
[12] for the lack of luminescence
ex-
in Ni
porphyrins was the existence of low energy excited states of d-d character lying between the lowest 3(a, r*) state and the ground state. A point worthy of FBP/TP
of discussion in the spectrum
is the observation of 28 lines at identical
wavelengths
in absorption
and fluorescence.
Al-
though many of these lines appear to the red of the region of band
I, there are 9 such lines in the
vicinity of band I from 6172.5 A to 6231.1 A. of these lines are strong transitions. reasonable
assumption
that
Five
Under
fluorescence
the
occurs
from the lowest excited electronic state [13], this
NIP
means that these lines arise from pure electronic transitions.
If these multiple electronic transitions
originate from one site, this is not consistent with presently accepted porphyrin theory [14], in which band Fig. 4. A “stiok” diagram of the stronger absorption lines of some metalloporphins in triphenylene at 77°K.
I contains
Although
only
one electronic
transition.
there is evidence that multiple sites do
occur in these samples, giving multiple transitions,
can have a substantial effect on the high resolution
a large number of nonequivalent
sites.
spectra of metalloporphyrins
tiple
the
studied.
ZnP
(Although
and PdP
which have now been
have the sharpest
photographic
lines.
recording of spectra pre-
site
question
selective excitation It
electronic
it seems unlikely that there are such must
await
experiments
has been pointed
out
The mul-
outcome
of
now in progress.
[I51 that
chlorin
is a
clude accurate measurements of spectral width and
common impurity in porphin and fluoresces to the
intensity,
red of band I of porphin.
visual estimates indicate that ZnP, PdP
and FBP
have comparable
widths.)
Linewidths
It is possible that many
of the lines in the vicinity
of band I are due to
of VOP are somewhat less sharp but the resolution
chlorin and other impurities.
is still high.
LUTZ [7] made a study of band IV of FBP by reson-
CUP and NIP have broad lines with
very little detail other than the general polarized
ance Raman
features mentioned above.
band
The
vibrational
phosphorescence
frequencies spectrum
observed
of PdP/TP
general, with quasiline spectra of PdP
in
the
agree, [4].
in
The
main difference is that they report that the 9-O transition
was a singlet
multiplets PdP/TP
elsewhere. was
a
at 6388 A with complex The
O-O
multiplet.
GOUTERX~AN [5] reported
transition
EASTWOOD
that the O-O
in and
and as the temperature to 161°K
was increased from 97°K
the higher energy peak increased at the
expense of the lower one. explanation
in terms
They gave a tentative
of a “2
geometry
model”
and state that studies at lower temperatures
and
higher resolution would be necessary to verify the
spectra.
contains
transitions
They
gave
PLUS and
evidence
that
at least three pure electronic
as witnessed
by
the
observation
of
three maxima in the excitation spectra of 21 resonance Raman
bands of FBP.
pointed out the possibility in band IV.
Theory
[ 161 has also
of an electronic origin
Similar resonance Raman
spectra in
the spectral region of band I would be helpful in interpreting the results reported here.
band of
the triplet luminescence of PdP in nonane is split
IV
Reoently
It is interesting
to speculate
on the relatively
large number of unpolarized lines which were observed in these studies, especially in FBP/TP ZnP/TP. of
Electron
VOP/TP
metalloporphin substitutional
[17]
have
enters sites.
and
spin resonance measurements demonstrated the
triphenylene
that
the
host
in
There are four molecules
in
the unit cell and the normals to the triphenylene
1088
J. BOH~WDY and B. F. KIM
planes make an angle of 51’ graphic c-axis [S].
Thus,
with the crystallo-
there are four porphin
planes tilted 39’ from the c-axis and symmetrically located around the c-axis. Simple geometrical
arguments
of the polarizs-
tion characteristics of such sites, discussed in Ref. [2] predict the in-plane pletely
o-polarized,
z transitions
the in-plane
to be oom-
y transitions
to
have 3 times greater intensity in rr than in 0, and any out-of-plane intensity
ratio
techniques
z transitions of
4 :3.
to have a rr to ts
Photographic
detection
may not be able to discern this differ-
ence and it seems possible that these unpolarized lines might
be out-of-plane
be possible with photoelectric ments
to determine
sufficient origin
accuracy
could
be
transitions.
It may
intensity
measure-
the polarization to
due
conclude to
ratios with
whether
z-polarized
their
transitions.
Current theories predict no out-of-plane transitions. (It should be mentioned that the unpolarized lines could be due to transitions
to states which &se
from a mixing of levels with different polarizations.) The morphology
and size of our crystals preclude
the right geometry
to verify this for certain.
A
different host with a more favorable orientation of the porphin molecules would be a better approach REFERENCES [1] B. F. KIM, J. BOHANDY, and C. K. JEN, J. Cbem. Phys. 59,213 (1973).
[2] J. BORANDY, B. F. KIM, and C. K. JEN, J. Mo2. Spectroscopy 49, 366 (1974). [3] A. N. SEVCHENKO,K. N. SOLOV’EV, S. F. SHKIBYAN, and M. V. SARZHEVSKAYA, Dok. Akad. Nauk. l&3,1391 (1963). [4] A. T. GRADYUSEKO, V. A. UASHENKOV, and K. N. SOLOV’EV,Biofizilca 14,827 (1969). [5] D. EASTWOOD and M. GOUTERMAN, J. Mol. Spectroscopy 35, 350 (1970). [6] J. B. CALL&, G. GO~TE~AN, Y. M. JONES, and B. H. HENDERSON,J. Mol. Spectroscopy 89, 410 (1971). [7] R. PLUS and M. LUTZ, Spectroscopy Lett. 7, 73 (1974). [S] A. K~no, Acta Cry&. 8, 166 (1950). [9] B. F. KIM, J. BOHANDY, and C. K. JEN, Spectrochim. Acta 3OA, 2031 (1974). [lo] G. W. CANTERS,J. VAN EOMOND,T. J. SOHAAFSMA, and J. H. VAN DER WAALS, Molec. Phys. 24, 1203 (1972). [Ill G. W. CANTERS,M. NOORT, and J. H. VAN DER WAALS, Chem. Phys. Lett. 30, 1 (1976). [12] R. L. AKE and M. GOUTERMAN,Theoret. Chim. Acta 17, 408 (1970). [13] See, for example, M. GOUTERMAN,Emited St&en of Matter (C. W. SHOPPEE,Ed.) Graduafe Studies Texas Technioel University 2, 63-100 (1973). [14] M. GOUTER~, J. Mol. Spectroscopy 6, 138 (1961). [15] M. GOUTERMAN,Private communication. [16] A. J. MCHUGH, M. GOUTER~, and C. WEISS, Theoret. Chiwa. Acta (Be&n) 24,346 (1972). [ 171 J. BOHANDY, B. F. KIM, and C. K. JEN, J. Mug. Reson. 15, 420 (1974).