Coordination Nanosheets Based on Terpyridine-Zinc(II) Complexes: As Photoactive Host Materials.
Takamasa TsukamotoKenji TakadaRyota SakamotoRyota MatsuokaRyojun ToyodaHiroaki MaedaToshiki YagiMichihiro NishikawaNaoaki ShinjoShuntaro AmanoTadashi IokawaNarutaka IshibashiTsugumi OiKoshiro KanayamaRina KinugawaYoichiro KodaToshiyuki KomuraShuhei NakajimaRyota FukuyamaNobuyuki FuseMakoto MizuiMasashi MiyasakiYutaro YamashitaKuni YamadaWenxuan ZhangRuocheng HanWenyu LiuTaro TsubomuraHiroshi NishiharaPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017)
Photoluminescent coordination nanosheets (CONASHs) comprising three-way terpyridine (tpy) ligands and zinc(II) ions are created by allowing the two constitutive components to react with each other at a liquid/liquid interface. Taking advantage of bottom-up CONASHs, or flexibility in organic ligand design and coordination modes, we demonstrate the diversity of the tpy-zinc(II) CONASH in structures and photofunctions. A combination of 1,3,5-tris[4-(4'-2,2':6',2″-terpyridyl)phenyl]benzene (1) and Zn(BF4)2 affords a cationic CONASH featuring the bis(tpy)Zn complex motif (1-Zn), while substitution of the zinc source with ZnSO4 realizes a charge-neutral CONASH with the [Zn2(μ-O2SO2)2(tpy)2] motif [1-Zn2(SO4)2]. The difference stems from the use of noncoordinating (BF4-) or coordinating and bridging (SO42-) anions. The change in the coordination mode alters the luminescence (480 nm blue in 1-Zn; 552 nm yellow in 1-Zn2(SO4)2). The photophysical property also differs in that 1-Zn2(SO4)2 shows solvatoluminochromism, whereas 1-Zn does not. Photoluminescence is also modulated by the tpy ligand structure. 2-Zn contains triarylamine-centered terpyridine ligand 2 and features the bis(tpy)Zn motif; its emission is substantially red-shifted (590 nm orange) compared with that of 1-Zn. CONASHs 1-Zn and 2-Zn possess cationic nanosheet frameworks with counteranions (BF4-), and thereby feature anion exchange capacities. Indeed, anionic xanthene dyes were taken up by these nanosheets, which undergo quasi-quantitative exciton migration from the host CONASH. This series of studies shows tpy-zinc(II) CONASHs as promising potential photofunctional nanomaterials.