Synthesis and Photophysical Properties of Iridium(III) Bisterpyridine and Its Homologues:  a Family of Complexes with a Long-Lived Excited State

A new synthetic procedure has been developed which makes possible the preparation of IrLL‘3+ complexes (L, L‘ = terpyridine derivative) in good yields. In a first step, IrLCl3 is obtained under relatively mild conditions as an intermediate. Subsequent reaction with L‘ (a few minutes in refluxing eth...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 1999-06, Vol.121 (21), p.5009-5016
Hauptverfasser: Collin, Jean-Paul, Dixon, Isabelle M, Sauvage, Jean-Pierre, Williams, J. A. Gareth, Barigelletti, Francesco, Flamigni, Lucia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A new synthetic procedure has been developed which makes possible the preparation of IrLL‘3+ complexes (L, L‘ = terpyridine derivative) in good yields. In a first step, IrLCl3 is obtained under relatively mild conditions as an intermediate. Subsequent reaction with L‘ (a few minutes in refluxing ethylene glycol) affords IrLL‘3+. The electrochemical behavior and ground- and excited-state spectroscopic properties of four IrLL‘3+ complexes in nitrile solvents are reported. The X-ray structure of one of these complexes is also described. The complexes have been designed keeping in mind their incorporation in linearly arranged multicomponent arrays, according to a templating strategy based on the assembly of tpy-type ligands by the Ir(III) center. The complexes feature a high-lying level for the luminescent excited state (>2.5 eV), with a satisfactory room-temperature luminescence intensity (φem ≈ 10-2) and lifetime on the microsecond time scale. These favorable properties indicate that the Ir(III)-tpy center will not be the final recipient of the energy-harvesting processes in multipartite systems built around them. Temperature-dependent studies of the luminescence properties in the 95−298 K range indicate that the higher-lying levels of these complexes are not efficient pathways for deactivation of the luminescent states. For these reasons, it is concluded that the studied Ir-tpy-type complexes are well suited (i) to play the role of photoactive center and to gather photo- and electroactive units or (ii) to act as electron relays in linearly arranged multicomponent arrays.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/ja9833669