Cyclic (Amino)(aryl)carbenes Enter the Field of Chromophore Ligands: Expanded π System Leads to Unusually Deep Red Emitting Cu I Compounds

A series of copper(I) complexes bearing a cyclic (amino)(aryl)carbene (CAArC) ligand with various complex geometries have been investigated in great detail with regard to their structural, electronic, and photophysical properties. Comparison of [CuX(CAArC)] (X = Br ( ), Cbz ( ), acac ( ), Ph acac (...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2020-05, Vol.142 (19), p.8897-8909
Hauptverfasser: Gernert, Markus, Balles-Wolf, Lukas, Kerner, Florian, Müller, Ulrich, Schmiedel, Alexander, Holzapfel, Marco, Marian, Christel M, Pflaum, Jens, Lambert, Christoph, Steffen, Andreas
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A series of copper(I) complexes bearing a cyclic (amino)(aryl)carbene (CAArC) ligand with various complex geometries have been investigated in great detail with regard to their structural, electronic, and photophysical properties. Comparison of [CuX(CAArC)] (X = Br ( ), Cbz ( ), acac ( ), Ph acac ( ), Cp ( ), and Cp* ( )) with known Cu complexes bearing cyclic (amino)(alkyl), monoamido, or diamido carbenes (CAAC, MAC, or DAC, respectively) as chromophore ligands reveals that the expanded π-system of the CAArC leads to relatively low energy absorption maxima between 350 and 550 nm in THF with high absorption coefficients of 5-15 × 10 M cm for - . Furthermore, - show intense deep red to near-IR emission involving their triplet excited states in the solid state and in PMMA films with λ = 621-784 nm. Linear [Cu(Cbz)( CAArC)] ( ) has been found to be an exceptional deep red (λ = 621 nm, ϕ = 0.32, τ = 366 ns) thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) emitter with a radiative rate constant of ca. 9 × 10 s , exceeding those of commercially employed Ir - or Pt -based emitters. Time-resolved transient absorption and fluorescence upconversion experiments complemented by quantum chemical calculations employing Kohn-Sham density functional theory and multireference configuration interaction methods as well as temperature-dependent steady-state and time-resolved luminescence studies provide a detailed picture of the excited-state dynamics of . To demonstrate the potential applicability of this new class of low-energy emitters in future photonic applications, such as nonclassical light sources for quantum communication or quantum cryptography, we have successfully conducted single-molecule photon-correlation experiments of , showing distinct antibunching as required for single-photon emitters.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.0c02234