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Abstract
Controlling photophysical properties is critical for the continued development of electroluminescent devices and luminescent materials. The preparation and study of novel molecules suitable as luminescent for the development of optoelectrical devices have recently received a lot of attention. Even though the as-triazine unit is a good building block for organic active substances, it is rarely used in this context. We created here novel bis-triazine derivative dyes in the far UV–Vis range by alkylation of triazine-thione derivatives with appropriate dibromo compounds. At the B3LYP/6-311**G(d,p) basis set, their optimal molecular structures were obtained. DFT technique confirmed that the new triazine derivatives are in noncoplanar with one of the two phenyl rings and the triazine plane rotating out by 102.09. Also, depending on the energy gap difference between HOMO and LUMO, some important parameters including chemical potential (π), electronegativity (χ), and chemical hardness (η) were calculated. The compounds may be readily polarized and have significant NLO characteristics, as seen by the tiny HOMO–LUMO energy gap. The calculated values for the polarizability (α) of the two new triazine derivatives have the range 6.09–10.75 × 10–24 (esu). The emission peaks seemed to move to the long-wavelength (redshift), with a rise in the fluorescence band, suggesting that the singlet excited state is more polar than the ground state. The influence of solvent polarity and the intermolecular charge transfer (ICT) processes are reflected in the photophysical properties of new fused triazine derivatives. These properties such as extinction coefficient, absorption and emission cross-sections, fluorescence quantum yield, fluorescence lifetime, oscillator strength, the dipole moment, radiative decay rate constant, the energy yield of fluorescence, and the attenuation length were assessed and discussed.
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1 University of Bisha, Physics Department, Faculty of Science, Bisha, Saudi Arabia (GRID:grid.494608.7) (ISNI:0000 0004 6027 4126); Taiz University, Physics Department, Faculty of Applied Science, Taiz, Yemen (GRID:grid.430813.d)
2 Cairo University, Laser Sciences and Interactions Department, National Institute of Laser-Enhanced Sciences (NILES), Giza, Egypt (GRID:grid.7776.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 0639 9286)
3 Helwan University, Department of Chemistry, Faculty of Science, Cairo, Egypt (GRID:grid.412093.d) (ISNI:0000 0000 9853 2750)
4 Egyptian Petroleum Research Institute (EPRI), Nasr City, Egypt (GRID:grid.454081.c) (ISNI:0000 0001 2159 1055)
5 Tanta University, Chemistry Department, Faculty of Science, Tanta, Egypt (GRID:grid.412258.8) (ISNI:0000 0000 9477 7793)
6 Cairo University, Chemistry Department, Faculty of Science, Giza, Egypt (GRID:grid.7776.1) (ISNI:0000 0004 0639 9286)