Coordination Properties of a Polyamine Cryptand with Two Different Binding Moieties. A
Case of a pH-Modulated Antenna Device Based on a New Eu(III) Cryptate Complex
posted on 2001-09-27, 00:00authored byCarla Bazzicalupi, Andrea Bencini, Emanuela Berni, Antonio Bianchi, Claudia Giorgi, Vieri Fusi, Barbara Valtancoli, Carlos Lodeiro, Ana Roque, Fernando Pina
Protonation and alkali- and alkaline-earth-metal coordination by the dipyridine-containing cryptand L have been
studied by means of potentiometric and spectroscopic (UV−vis, 1H NMR) measurements in aqueous solutions.
This ligand is constituted by an aliphatic polyamine chain and a coordinating cleft, delimited by two dipyridine
units, where the metal ion is lodged. The resulting complexes are characterized by an unusually high stability.
The polyamine chain is not involved, or weakly involved, in metal coordination, and facile protonation can occur
on the nitrogen atoms of this moiety. Similar coordination features are found in the Eu(III) complex. A fluorescence
emission study reveals that the Eu(III) cryptate shows the characteristic visible emission of the metal, due to the
intramolecular energy transfer to the metal ion mainly from the lower energy triplet state of the cryptand. On the
other hand, the emission intensity is modulated by pH, giving a maximum at neutral pH and decreasing at both
acidic and alkaline pH values.