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RESEARCH PRODUCT
From linear quaterthiophene to sulflower: A comparative theoretical study
Enrique OrtíPedro M. ViruelaJuan Aragósubject
chemistry.chemical_classificationDouble bondChemistryConjugated systemCondensed Matter PhysicsPhotochemistryBiochemistryMolecular electronic transitionBlueshiftchemistry.chemical_compoundThiopheneMoleculePhysical and Theoretical ChemistrySulflowerEnvelope (waves)description
Abstract In this paper, we report a theoretical study of four types of thiophene-based oligomers showing the same number of C C double bonds and very different molecular structures. The comparative study has been performed on the basis of B3LYP/6-31G∗∗ calculations. The way the thiophene rings are linked together has a remarkable influence on the molecular and electronic properties. Linear quaterthiophene and heptathienoacene show similar aromatic structures but a loss of π-conjugation is detected for the latter due to the condensation of thiophene rings. A blue shift of the most intense electronic transition is predicted for fused heptathienoacene compared with non-fused quaterthiophene. Cyclic quaterthiophene exhibits quinoid thiophene rings folded in an envelope shape and should be visualized as a sulphur-bridged, cis-transoid polyenic chain. Circularly-fused sulflower presents a loss of π-conjugation with respect to linear systems due to its highly-branched conjugated backbone. The loss of conjugation and the high symmetry of the molecule determine that sulflower shows no optical absorption in the visible or near-UV.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2009-10-01 | Journal of Molecular Structure: THEOCHEM |