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Computational study of the photophysical properties and electronic structure of iridium(III) photosensitizer complexes with electron-withdrawing groups.

Yunlong ShangZhoujie ZhangMengping HuangNa ShuHanyu LuoQiyan CaoBingbing FanYu HanMin FangYong WuJia-Wei Xu
Published in: Physical chemistry chemical physics : PCCP (2023)
A series of novel [Ir(tpy)(btp)Cl] + complexes (Ir1-Ir4) have been reported to show excellent performance as photosensitizers. The introduction of electron-withdrawing groups increases visible light absorption and the lifetime of triplet states. To improve the photophysical properties, we theoretically design Ir5-Ir9 with electron-withdrawing groups (Cl, F, COOH, CN and NO 2 ). Surprisingly, our findings indicate that the photosensitizer performance does not strictly increase with the electron-withdrawing ability of the substituents. In this work, the geometric and electronic structures, transition features, and photophysical properties of Ir1-Ir9 are investigated. The natural transition orbital (NTO) analysis indicates that the T 1 and T 2 states play a role in the photochemical pathways. Ultraviolet-visible (UV-vis) absorption spectra and charge-transfer spectra (CTS) have been investigated to show that the introduction of electron-withdrawing groups not only improves the visible light absorbing ability, but also changes the nature of electron excitation, providing a future molecular design strategy for similar series of photosensitizers. The rates of (reverse) intersystem crossing and the Huang-Rhys factors are evaluated to interpret the experimental results within the framework of Marcus theory. For complexes Ir1-Ir7, the introduction of electron-withdrawing groups leads to a lower efficiency of reverse intersystem crossing and a strong non-radiative process T 2 → T 1 , resulting in a long triplet lifetime and excellent performance as a photosensitizer. Furthermore, some newly designed complexes (Ir7-Ir9) show great potential as thermally activated delayed fluorescence emitters, contrary to our initial expectations.
Keyphrases
  • photodynamic therapy
  • visible light
  • squamous cell carcinoma
  • high resolution
  • electron microscopy
  • electron transfer
  • density functional theory