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Nile Red Fluorescence: Where’s the Twist?

Camilla Gajo, Darya Shchepanovska, Jacob Jones, Γαβριήλ Καρράς, Partha Malakar, Gregory M. Greetham, Olivia A. Hawkins, Caleb J. C. Jordan, Basile F. E. Curchod, Thomas A. A. Oliver

2024The Journal of Physical Chemistry B23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

High Resolution Image Download MS PowerPoint Slide Nile Red is a fluorescent dye used extensively in bioimaging due to its strong solvatochromism. The photophysics underpinning Nile Red’s fluorescence has been disputed for decades, with some studies claiming that the dye fluoresces from two excited states and/or that the main emissive state is twisted and intramolecular charge-transfer (ICT) in character as opposed to planar ICT (PICT). To resolve these long-standing questions, a combined experimental and theoretical study was used to unravel the mechanism of Nile Red’s fluorescence. Time-resolved fluorescence measurements indicated that Nile Red emission occurs from a single excited state. Theoretical calculations revealed no evidence for a low-lying TICT state, with the S 1 minimum corresponding to a PICT state. Ultrafast pump–probe spectroscopic data contained no signatures associated with an additional excited state involved in the fluorescence decay of Nile Red. Collectively, these data in polar and nonpolar solvents refute dual fluorescence in Nile Red and definitively demonstrate that emission occurs from a PICT state.

Topics & Concepts

FluorescenceNile redTwistPhysicsOpticsMathematicsGeometryMolecular Sensors and Ion DetectionPhotoreceptor and optogenetics researchPorphyrin and Phthalocyanine Chemistry
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