Journal of Physical Chemistry B, Vol.124, No.10, 1995-2005, 2020
Subpicosecond Solvation Response and Partial Viscosity Decoupling of Solute Diffusion in Ionic Acetamide Deep Eutectic Solvents: Fluorescence Up-Conversion and Fluorescence Correlation Spectroscopic Measurements
Fluorescence up-conversion (similar to 250 fs instrumental response) coupled with time correlated single photon counting measurements was performed to explore the complete Stokes shift dynamics of a dipolar solute probe, coumarin 153 (C153), in several ionic acetamide deep eutectic solvents (DESs) that contained lithium nitrate/bromide/perchlorate as electrolyte. Combined measurements near room temperature reflected a total dynamic Stokes shift of approximately 800-1100 cm(-1) and triexponential solvation response functions. Interestingly, the average rate of solvation became faster upon successive replacement of bromide by nitrate in these deep eutectics, and a subpicosecond time scale emerged in the measured solvation response when bromide was fully replaced by nitrate. Temperature dependent solute diffusion in these deep eutectics at the single molecule level, monitored by tracking the translational motion of rhodamine 6G (R6G) via fluorescence correlation spectroscopic (FCS) technique, revealed pronounced fractional viscosity dependence of the solute's translational motion. Subsequently, this partial decoupling of solute translation was attributed to the microheterogeneous nature of these ionic DESs after examining the diffusion-viscosity relationship via the FCS measurements of R6G in several normal solvents at room temperature and in a liquid amide solvent at different temperatures.