Three new luminescent and redox-active Ru(II) complexes containing novel dendritic polypyridine ligands have been synthesized, and their absorption spectra, luminescence properties (both at room temperature in fluid solution and at 77 K in rigid matrix), and redox behavior have been investigated. The dendritic ligands are made of 1,10-phenanthroline coordinating subunits and of carbazole groups as branching sites. The first and second generation species of this novel class of dendritic ligands (L1 and L2, respectively; see Figure 1 for their structural formulas) have been prepared and employed. The metal dendrimers investigated are [Ru(bpy)(2)(L1)](2+) (1; bpy = 2,2'-bipyridine), [Ru(bpy)(2)(L2)](2+) (2), and [Ru(L1)(3)](2+) (3; see Figure 2). For the sake of completeness and comparison purposes, also the absorption spectra, redox behavior, and luminescence properties of L1 and L2 have been studied, together with the properties of 3,6-di(tert-butyl)carbazole (L0) and [Ru(bpy)(2)(phen)](2+) (4, phen = 1,10-phenanthroline). The absorption spectra of the free dendritic ligands show features which can be assigned to the various subunits (i.e., carbazole and phenanthroline groups) and additional bands at lower energies (at lambda > 300 nm) which are assigned to carbazole-to-phenanthroline charge-transfer (CT) transitions. These latter bands are significantly red-shifted upon acid and/or zinc acetate addition. Both L1 and L2 exhibit relatively intense luminescence at room temperature in fluid solution (lifetimes in the nanosecond time scale, quantum yields of the order of 10(-2)-10(-1)) and at 77 K in rigid matrix (lifetimes in the millisecond time scale). Such a luminescence is assigned to CT states at room temperature and to phenanthroline-centered pi-pi triplet levels at 77 K. The room-temperature luminescence of L1 and L2 is totally quenched by acid or zinc acetate. The metal dendrimers exhibit the typical absorption and luminescence properties of Ru(II) polypyridine complexes. In particular, metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) bands dominate the visible absorption spectra, and formally triplet MLCT levels govern the excited-state properties. Excitation spectroscopy evidences that all the light absorbed by the dendritic branches is transferred with unitary efficiency to the luminescent MLCT states in 1-3, showing that the new metal dendrimers can be regarded as efficient light-harvesting antenna systems. All the free ligands and metal dendrimers exhibit a rich redox behavior (except L2 and 3, whose redox behavior was not investigated because of solubility reasons), with clearly attributable reversible carbazole- and metal-centered oxidation and polypyridine-centered reduction processes. The electronic interaction between the carbazole redox-active sites of the dendritic ligands is affected by Ru(II) coordination.
Several ruthenium(II) complexes with new tridentate polypyridine ligands have been prepared, and their photophysical properties have been studied. The new tridentate ligands are tpy-modified systems (tpy = 2,2':6',2' '-terpyridine) in which aromatic substituents designed to be coplanar with the tpy moiety are introduced, with the aim of enhancing delocalization in the acceptor ligand of the potentially luminescent metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) state and increasing the MLCT-MC energy gap (MC = metal-centered excited state). Indeed, the Ru(II) complexes obtained with this new family of tridentate ligands exhibit long-lived luminescence at room temperature (up to 200 ns). The enhanced luminescence properties of these complexes support this design strategy and are superior to those of the model Ru(tpy)22+ compound and compare favorably with those of the best Ru(II) complexes with tridentate ligands reported so far.
A family of tridendate ligands 1 a-e, based on the 2-aryl-4,6-di(2-pyridyl)-s-triazine motif, was prepared along with their hetero- and homoleptic Ru(II) complexes 2 a-e ([Ru(tpy)(1 a-e)](2+); tpy=2,2':6',2"-terpyridine) and 3 a-e ([(Ru(1 a-e)(2)](2+)), respectively. The ligands and their complexes were characterized by (1)H NMR spectroscopy, ES-MS, and elemental analysis. Single-crystal X-ray analysis of 2 a and 2 e demonstrated that the triazine core is nearly coplanar with the non-coordinating ring, with dihedral angles of 1.2 and 18.6 degrees, respectively. The redox behavior and electronic absorption and luminescence properties (both at room temperature in liquid acetonitrile and at 77 K in butyronitrile rigid matrix) were investigated. Each species undergoes one oxidation process centered on the metal ion, and several (three for 2 a-e and four for 3 a-e) reduction processes centered on the ligand orbitals. All compounds exhibit intense absorption bands in the UV region, assigned to spin-allowed ligand-centered (LC) transitions, and moderately intense spin-allowed metal-to-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) absorption bands in the visible region. The compounds exhibit relatively intense emissions, originating from triplet MLCT levels, both at 77 K and at room temperature. The incorporation of triazine rings and the near planarity of the noncoordinating ring increase the luminescence lifetimes of the complexes by lowering the energy of the (3)MLCT state and creating a large energy gap to the dd state.
Auf der Basis des Multichromophor‐Ansatzes wurde der hier gezeigte Ruthenium(II)‐Komplex erhalten, der die längste bisher bekannte Lumineszenzlebensdauer aufweist (1.8 μs). Beim Multichromophor‐Ansatz nutzt man eine nur geringe Wechselwirkung zwischen den vorhandenen Chromophoren, sodass deren individuelle Eigenschaften weitgehend erhalten bleiben.
In the multichromophoric ruthenium(ii) species with anthracene subunits, the subunits play the role of excited-state reservoir elements for the luminescence of the metal chromophore (the "engine"). The overall effect is metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) emission with prolonged lifetimes. For more information see the following article by Campagna, Hanan, and co-workers.
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