posted on 2021-06-01, 13:38authored byTadeas Liska, Mengdi Li, Louise M. Cañada, Sungwon Yoon, Thomas S. Teets, Matthias Zeller, Thomas G. Gray
Organoboranes are commonly incorporated
into ligands for luminescent
molecules to expand conjugation pathways and impart Lewis acidity.
Here, we report on the use of organoboranes to induce charge transfer
from the luminescent core of bisimadazolylcarbazolide platinum(II)
alkynyls. The resulting donor–acceptor complexes are green-yellow
phosphorescent emitters with low (<1%) quantum yield and microsecond
lifetime in methylene chloride solution. In rigid PMMA film doped
at 2% (w/w) the quantum yield significantly increases to 15–48%
with lifetimes between 15 and 43 ms, suggesting a significant decrease
in the rate of nonradiative decay in the rigid medium. TD-DFT calculations
reveal that these complexes possess essentially HOMO–LUMO one-particle
transitions to singlet excited states and their emission originates
from a ligand/metal-to-ligand charge transfer (LMLCT) transition with
the borane moiety as the electron acceptor. The observation of solvatochromism
in the emission spectra supports a charge-transfer mechanism from
the (BIMCA)Pt core through the alkynyl ligand to the borane substituents.