Variable Peripheral Ligand Donation Tunes Electronic Structure and NIR II Emission in Tetrathiafulvalene Tetrathiolate Diradicaloids

Near-infrared (NIR) lumiphores are promising candidates for numerous imaging, communication, and sensing applications, but they typically require large, conjugated scaffolds to achieve emission in this low-energy region. Due to the extended conjugation and synthetic complexity required, it is extrem...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Chemical Society 2024-06, Vol.146 (25), p.17285-17295
Hauptverfasser: McNamara, Lauren E., Boyn, Jan-Niklas, Anferov, Sophie W., Filatov, Alexander S., Maloney, Miles W., Mazziotti, David A., Schaller, Richard D., Anderson, John S.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Near-infrared (NIR) lumiphores are promising candidates for numerous imaging, communication, and sensing applications, but they typically require large, conjugated scaffolds to achieve emission in this low-energy region. Due to the extended conjugation and synthetic complexity required, it is extremely difficult to tune the photophysical properties of these systems for desired applications. Here, we report facile tuning of deep NIR-emitting diradicaloid complexes through simple modification of peripheral ligands. These new lumiphores are rare examples of air-, acid-, and water-stable emissive diradicaloids. We apply a simple Hammett parameter-based strategy to tune the electron donation of the capping ligand across a series of commercially available triarylphosphines. This minor peripheral modification significantly alters the electronic structure, and consequently, the electrochemical, photophysical, and magnetic properties of the tetrathiafulvalene tetrathiolate (TTFtt)-based lumiphores. The resultant ∼100 nm absorption and emission range spans common laser lines and the desirable telecom region (ca. 1260–1550 nm). Furthermore, these lumiphores are sensitive to local dielectrics, distinguishing them as promising candidates for ratiometric imaging and/or barcoding in the deep NIR region.
ISSN:0002-7863
1520-5126
1520-5126
DOI:10.1021/jacs.4c04032