화학공학소재연구정보센터
Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.49, No.4, 1337-1346, 2010
Back-to-Back Dinuclear Platinum Terpyridyl Complexes: Synthesis and Photophysical Studies
Two back-to-back terpyridine ligands using fluorenyl as bridging group (1-L and 2-L) and their corresponding dinuclear platinum(II) complexes (11 and 2) were synthesized and characterized. Their electronic absorption, photoluminescence, and the triplet transient difference absorption were systematically investigated. Both ligands possess intense (1)pi,pi* absorption in the UV region, and they exhibit structured (1)pi,pi* fluorescence around 400 nm. With addition of p-toluenesuffonic acid to the ligands, both the absorption band and the emission band are red-shifted because of the increased electron-withdrawing ability of the protonated terpyridines and possible mixture of some intraligand charge transfer (ILCT) character. For complexes 1 and 2, they both exhibit broad and strong absorption between 400 and 500 nm, which is assigned as the (1)pi,pi*/(ILCT)-I-1/(MLCT)-M-1 (metal-to-ligand charge transfer) transition. The involvement of (ILCT)-I-1 in the lowest excited state is evident by the acid titration experiment of the ligands. At room temperature, the complexes exhibit dual emission that admixes fluorescence and phosphorescence from the (1,3)pi,pi*/(ILCT)-I-1,3/(MLCT)-M-1,3 states. The assignment of the emitting states is based on the distinct emission lifetimes, different sensitivity to oxygen quenching, and different temperature dependency. Both complexes exhibit emission at 77 K, which is assigned as the mixture of (3)pi,pi*/(MLCT)-M-3. 1 and 2 also exhibit two triplet excited-state absorption bands in the visible to the NIR region, which are tentatively attributed to the (3)pi,pi* and (MLCT)-M-3/(ILCT)-I-3 state. In addition, the connection pattern between the fluorenyl component and the terpyridyl components influences the excited-state characteristics of both the ligands and the complexes. Ligand 1-L and its corresponding platinum complex 1 that have the triplet bond connection between the fluorenyl and terpyridyl components exhibit a red-shifted low-energy absorption band, an emission band, and a transient absorption band compared to ligand 2-L and complex 2 that have the fluorenyl directly attached to terpyridyl components. These differences could be rationalized by the enhanced conjugation between the fluorenyl and terpyridyl components in 1-L and 1 because of the better coplanarity induced by the triple bond.