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1.
Inorg Chem ; 46(16): 6483-94, 2007 Aug 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-17622140

ABSTRACT

To explore the photophysics of platinum acetylide chromophores with strong two-photon absorption cross-sections, we have investigated the synthesis and spectroscopic characterization of a series of platinum acetylide complexes that feature highly pi-conjugated ligands substituted with pi-donor or -acceptor moieties. The molecules (numbered 1-4) considered in the present work are analogs of bis(phenylethynyl)bis(tributylphosphine)platinum(II) complexes. Molecule 1 carries two alkynyl-benzothiazolylfluorene ligands, and molecule 2 has two alkynyl-diphenylaminofluorene ligands bound to the central platinum atom. Compounds 3 and 4 possess two dihexylaminophenyl substituents at their ends and differ by the number of platinum atoms in the oligomer "core" (one vs two in 3 and 4, respectively). The ligands have strong effective two-photon absorption cross-sections, while the heavy metal platinum centers give rise to efficient intersystem crossing to long-lived triplet states. Ultrafast transient absorption and emission spectra demonstrate that one-photon excitation of the chromophores produces an S1 state delocalized across the two conjugated ligands, with weak (excitonic) coupling through the platinum centers. Intersystem crossing occurs rapidly (Kisc approximately 1011 s-1) to produce the T1 state, which is possibly localized on a single conjugated fluorenyl ligand. The triplet state is strongly absorbing (epsilonTT > 5 x 104 M-1 cm-1), and it is very long-lived (tau > 100 micro s). Femtosecond pulses were used to characterize the two-photon absorption properties of the complexes, and all of the chromophores are relatively efficient two-photon absorbers in the visible and near-infrared region of the spectrum (600-800 nm). The complexes exhibit maximum two-photon absorption at a shorter wavelength than 2lambda for the one-photon band, consistent with the dominant two-photon transition arising from a two-photon-allowed gerade-gerade transition. Nanosecond transient absorption experiments carried out on several of the complexes with excitation at 803 nm confirm that the long-lived triplet state can be produced efficiently via a sequence involving two-photon excitation to produce S1, followed by intersystem crossing to produce T1.

2.
J Chem Phys ; 122(21): 214708, 2005 Jun 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15974763

ABSTRACT

In this work we detail the photophysical properties of a series of butadiynes having the formula H-(C6H4-C[triple bond]C)n-(C[triple bond]C-C6H4)n-H, n=1-3 and ligands H-(C6H4-C[triple bond]C)n-H, n=1-3 and compare these to previous work done on a complimentary series of platinum-containing complexes having the formula trans-Pt[(PC4H9)3]2[(C[triple bond]-C6H4)n-H]2, n=1-3. We are interested in understanding the role of the platinum in the photophysical properties. We found that there is conjugation through the platinum in the singlet states, but the triplet states show more complex behavior. The T1 exciton, having metal-to-ligand charge-transfer character, is most likely confined to one ligand but the Tn exciton appears to have ligand-to-metal charge-transfer character. The platinum effect was largest when n=1. When n=2-3, the S0-S1,S1-S0,T1-S0, and T1-Tn spectral properties of the platinum complex are less influenced by the metal, becoming equivalent to those of the corresponding butadiynes. When n=1, platinum decreases the triplet state lifetime, but its effect diminishes as n increases to 2.

3.
J Phys Chem A ; 109(6): 999-1007, 2005 Feb 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16833406

ABSTRACT

As part of an effort to develop a spectroscopic structure-property relationship in platinum acetylide oligomers, we have prepared a series of mesoionic bidentate Pt(PBu3)2L2 compounds containing sydnone groups. The ligand is the series o-Syd-(C6H4-C[triple bond]C)n-H, where n = 1-3, designated as Syd-PEn-H. The terminal oligomer unit consists of a sydnone group ortho to the acetylene carbon. We synthesized the platinum complex (Syd-PEn-Pt), the unmodified ligands (PEn-H), and the unmodified platinum complexes (PEn-Pt). The compounds were characterized by various methods, including X-ray diffraction, 13C NMR, ground-state absorption, fluorescence, phosphorescence, and laser flash photolysis. From solving the structure of Syd-PE1-Pt, we find the angle between the sydnone group and the phenyl group is 45 degrees . By comparison of the 13C NMR spectra of the sydnone-containing ligands, the sydnone complexes with the corresponding unmodified ligands and complexes not containing the sydnone group, the sydnone group is shown to polarize the nearest acetylenes and have a charge-transfer interaction with the platinum center. Ground-state absorption spectra of the complexes in various solvents give evidence that the Syd-PE1-Pt complex has an excited state less polar than the ground state, while the PE1-Pt complex has an excited state more polar than the ground state. In all the higher complexes the excited state is more polar than the ground state. The phosphorescence spectrum of the Syd-PE1-Pt complex has an intense vibronic progression distinctly different from the PE1-Pt complex. The sydnone effect is small in Syd-PE2-Pt and negligible in Syd-PE3-Pt. From absorption and emission spectra, we measured the singlet-state energy E(S), the triplet-state energy E(T), and the singlet-triplet splitting Delta E(ST). By comparison with energies obtained from the unmodified complexes, attachment of the sydnone lowers E(S) by approximately 0.1 eV and raises E(T) by approximately 0.1 eV. As a result, the sydnone group lowers Delta E(ST) by approximately 0.2 eV. The trends suggest one of the triplet-state singly occupied molecular orbitals (SOMOs) is localized on the sydnone group, while the other SOMO resides on the rest of the ligand.

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