Dual fluorescence at ca . 447 nm and 545 nm was observed from the aqueous 1 naphthylamine (NA) solutions at pH higher than 13 6. Similar dual fluorescence was also found with sodium 1 naphthylaminoacetate(NAA) , but not with N, N disubstituted 1 aminonaphthalenes such as sodium 1 naphthylaminodiacetate(NADA) and 1 dimethylaminonaphthalene(DMAN). No change in absorption spectra of NA and NAA was observed in this pH region.It was proposed that the dual fluorescence observed with NA and NAA was due to the excited state dissociation of the primary and secondary amines at high pH. From the dual fluorescence intensity ratio pH titration curve, the p K * as of NA and NAA were estimated to be between 14 and 15 which are much lower than the ground state p K a. The novel approatch is such a simple, convenient and frequent analysis technique that it can be widely used in detecting the substitutional derivatives of aminonaphthalene.
pH titration of the fluorescence of N-(1-naphthyl)aminoacetic acid(NAA) was performed in aqueous solution over pH range of 1 5—12 5. Despite no shift in the fluorescence maximum wavelength, the titration curve showed an Ω-shaped profile with increasing pH with two inflection points at pH 4 1 and pH 11 5, respectively. These values correspond to the excited-state pK *_a s of carboxylic group and ammonium cation, respectively, which are both higher than those of the corresponding ground-state pK_as of 2 64 and 11 83, of which the former changes more. The substantial weakening of the proton dissociation of carboxylic group in the excited state should be indicative of the decrease in the inductive +I-effect of the ammonium cation at the β-position due to the excited-state intramolecular charge transfer from naphthalene moiety to ammonium. The latter was also confirmed by the slight increase in the exited-state pK *_ a2. The fact that the increase in pK *_ a1 is larger than that in pK *_ a2 suggests that the effect of the intramolecular charge transfer on the involved moiety be weaker than that on a remote moiety in the same species. This could be taken into consideration for designing means of tuning the structures and properties of peptide and protein via photo-excitation. It was identified that the NAA zwitterion(Ⅱ) was the emissive species. The fluorescence quenching at high pH was assumed to be due to the photo-induced intramolecular electron transfer between carboxylate anion and the excited naphthalene moiety. The present case represents an example in which both intramolecular charge transfer and electron transfer occur to shape the pH titration profile.
The fluorescence spectra in cyclohexane of a series of benzanilides(BAs) with different \%para\% substituents at the anilino moiety revealed that BAs emitted dual fluorescence, with one normal weak emission at ca . 330 nm and an abnormally long wavelength emission ranging from 460 to 550 nm. The long wavelength emission was found strongly dependent of the electron donating capacity of the substituent at the anilino moiety and a stronger electron donating substituent led to a red shift in the emission. The energies of the long wavelength emission of the BAs were correlated to the oxidation potentials of the donors, E \-\{D/D +\}, and a nice linear correlation was found with a slope of +0 66, which clearly pointed to the charge transfer character of the emissive state for the long wavelength emission and the high decoupling extent of the charges in the CT state. This is the first report that shows the direct evidence for the CT nature. The results might be of significance in understanding the photophysics of peptide and protein and in designing novel fluorescent chemosensors.