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1.
Angew Chem Int Ed Engl ; : e202409115, 2024 Jul 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38965782

ABSTRACT

Cyclic amino(alkyl) and cyclic amino(aryl) carbenes (cAACs/cAArCs) have been established as very useful ligands for catalytic and photonic applications of transition metal complexes. Herein, we describe the synthesis of a structurally related sterically demanding, electrophilic [2.2]isoindolinophanyl-based carbene (iPC) with a [2.2]paracyclophane moiety. The latter leads to more delocalized frontier orbitals and intense green fluorescence of (HiPC)OTf (2) from an intra-ligand charge transfer (1ILCT) state in the solid state. Base-promoted synthesis of the free carbene led to an unusual ring expansion and subsequent dimerization reaction, but the beneficial ligand properties can be exploited by trapping in situ at a metal center. The iPC ligand is a very potent π-chromophore, which participates in low energy metal-to-ligand (ML)CT transitions in [RhCl(CO)2(iPC)] (4) and IL-"through-space"-CT transitions in [Au(iPC)2]OTf (5). The steric demand of the iPC leads to high stability of 5 against air, moisture, or solvent attack, and ultralong-lived green phosphorescence with a lifetime of 185 µs is observed in solution. The beneficial photophysical and electronic properties of the iPC ligand, including a large accessible π surface area, were exploited by employing highly efficient energy transfer (EnT) photocatalysis in a [2+2] styrene cycloaddition reaction using 5, which outperformed other established photocatalysts in comparison.

2.
Chemistry ; 29(51): e202300946, 2023 Sep 12.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37272620

ABSTRACT

A series of chiral mechanochromic copper(I) cAAC (cAAC=cyclic (alkyl)(amino)carbene) complexes with a variety of amide ligands have been studied with regard to their photophysical and chiroptical properties to elucidate structure-property relationships for the design of efficient triplet exciton emitters exhibiting circularly polarized luminescence. Depending on the environment, which determines the excited state energies, either thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) from 1/3 LLCT states or phosphorescence from 3 LLCT/LC states occurs. However, neither chiral moieties at the carbene nor at the carbazolate ligands provide detectable luminescence dissymmetries glum . An exception is [Cu(phenoxazinyl)(cAAC)], showing orange to deep red TADF with λmax =601-715 nm in solution, powders and in PMMA. In this case, the amide ligand can undergo distortions in the excited state. This design motif leads to the first linear, non-aggregated CPL-active copper(I) complex with glum of -3.4 ⋅ 10-3 combined with a high radiative rate constant of 6.7 ⋅ 105  s-1 .

3.
Inorg Chem ; 61(44): 17427-17437, 2022 Nov 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36283105

ABSTRACT

Cyclopentadienyls are well-known strong donor ligands and have been successfully employed in catalysis as they tolerate a variety of substituents to adjust their steric and electronic properties. Although such highly modifiable ligands are of great interest for luminescence and photocatalytic applications, studies of CpR-containing photoactive transition-metal complexes are quite rare. In this work, we present a structural, electrochemical, and first elaborated photophysical investigation of a series of copper(I) half-sandwich complexes bearing cyclic alkyl(amino)carbenes (CAACs) as chromophore ligands and compare them with [Cu(Cp)(IDipp)] and [Cu(Cp*)(IDipp)] bearing a traditional N-heterocyclic carbene. Furthermore, we present the first molecular structure derived from single-crystal X-ray diffraction of a copper(I) indenyl complex, which can be described as an η2 (σ, π)-coordination. The CuI half-sandwich complexes show blue-green to orange phosphorescence with a photoluminescence quantum yield of up to 59% and radiative rate constants kr of up to 4 × 104 s-1 in the solid state, depending on the substitution pattern of the CpR ligand. Our TD/DFT calculations suggest that the emitting excited states are of 3MLCT/LLCT character. We determined the excited-state lifetime of the CuI half-sandwich complexes in solution to be as long as 600 ns, which in combination with the large π-surface of the CpR ligands allows for Dexter energy transfer for photocatalytic applications. In addition, the chiroptical properties of chiral [Cu(Cp/Cp*)(CAACMenthone)] were studied and compared to [CuCl(CAACMenthone)], of which we demonstrate that its circular polarized luminescence is the result of excimer formation and not, as previously reported, attributed to the monomeric C1-symmetric structure.

4.
Inorg Chem ; 61(37): 14833-14844, 2022 Sep 19.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36069727

ABSTRACT

Molecular near-IR (NIR) triplet-state emitters are of importance for the development of new, organic-electronics-based telecommunication technologies as optical fibers operating in the corresponding spectral bands allow for data transfer over much longer distances due to the significantly lower attenuation. However, achieving such low-energy triplet excited states with good radiative rate constants is very challenging, and studies regarding the single-photon emission of organometallics in this energy range are scarce. We have prepared a series of trigonal CuI CAAC complexes bearing chelating ligands with O, N, S, and Se donor atoms and studied their photophysical properties in this context. The compounds show weak low-energy absorption in solution between 400 and 500 nm due to mixed Cu → CAAC 1MLCT/LLCT states, resulting in yellow-green to orange appearance, which we have also correlated to the 15N NMR resonances of the π-accepting carbene ligand. In the solid state, phosphorescence from dominant 3(Cu → CAAC) CT states is observed at room temperature. The emission of the complexes is bathochromically shifted in comparison to structurally related linearly coordinated copper(I) CAAC complexes due to structural reorganization in the excited state to a T-shape. For [Cu(dbm)(CAACMe)], the broad phosphorescence with outstanding λmax = 760 nm tailors out to ca. 1100 nm and leads to its proof-of-concept application as a nonclassical single-photon light source, constituting key functional units for the implementation of tap-proof data transfer.

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