J.M. Turlet, M.R. Philpott
Chemical Physics Letters
The polarized emission spectra of melt and vapor grown single crystals of carefully purified 9-cyanoanthracene (9-CNA) are reported. This materials has a quasi one-dimensional structure with molecules stacked along the c-axis. In crystals previously unirradiated at room temperature, the emission is excimer-like with a double peak (550 nm, E⊥c) and (525 nm, E|c) at 2 K, and a single peak at 300 K (588 nm, E, |c). Exposure to UV radiation at room temperature induces fluorescence associated with the production of photodimers. At 2 K this fluorescence is highly structured and coexists with excimer emission. It also extends to higher energies than the origin of the exciton band of the first singlet, supporting a model in which this component of the fluorescence arises from 9-CNA molecules separated from bulk by a matrix of photodimers. The photoproduct thus acts somewhat like a Shpol'skii matrix for these unreacted molecules. © 1976.
J.M. Turlet, M.R. Philpott
Chemical Physics Letters
R.M. Macfarlane, T.L. Harris, et al.
Optics Letters
W. Lenth, R.M. Macfarlane, et al.
LEOS 1988
I. Pockrand, J.D. Swalen, et al.
The Journal of Chemical Physics