posted on 2023-01-27, 17:09authored byRoss Davidson, Yu-Ting Hsu, Mark A. Fox, Juan A. Aguilar, Dmitry Yufit, Andrew Beeby
Emissive compounds with long emission lifetimes (μs
to ms)
in the visible region are of interest for a range of applications,
from oxygen sensing to cellular imaging. The emission behavior of
Ir(ppy)2(acac) complexes (where ppy is the 2-phenylpyridyl
chelate and acac is the acetylacetonate chelate) with an oligo(para-phenyleneethynylene) (OPE3) motif containing three
para-rings and two ethynyl bridges attached to acac or ppy is examined
here due to the accessibility of the long-lived OPE3 triplet states.
Nine Ir(ppy)2(acac) complexes with OPE3 units are synthesized
where the OPE3 motif is at the acac moiety (aOPE3), incorporated in
the ppy chelate (pOPE3) or attached to ppy via a durylene link (dOPE3).
The aOPE3 and dOPE3 complexes contain OPE3 units that are decoupled
from the Ir(ppy)2(acac) core by adopting perpendicular
ring–ring orientations, whereas the pOPE3 complexes have OPE3
integrated into the ppy ligand to maximize electronic coupling with
the Ir(ppy)2(acac) core. While the conjugated pOPE3 complexes
show emission lifetimes of 0.69–32.8 μs similar to the
lifetimes of 1.00–23.1 μs for the non-OPE3 Ir(ppy)2(acac) complexes synthesized here, the decoupled aOPE3 and
dOPE3 complexes reveal long emission lifetimes of 50–625 μs.
The long lifetimes found in aOPE3 and dOPE3 complexes are due to intramolecular
reversible electronic energy transfer (REET) where the long-lived
triplet-state metal to ligand charge transfer (3MLCT) states
exchange via REET with the even longer-lived triplet-state localized
OPE3 states. The proposed REET process is supported by changes observed
in excitation wavelength-dependent and time-dependent emission spectra
from aOPE3 and dOPE3 complexes, whereas emission spectra from pOPE3
complexes remain independent of the excitation wavelength and time
due to the well-established 3MLCT states of many Ir(ppy)2(acac) complexes. The long lifetimes, visible emission maxima
(524–526 nm), and photoluminescent quantum yields of 0.44–0.60
for the dOPE3 complexes indicate the possibility of utilizing such
compounds in oxygen-sensing and cellular imaging applications.