Taming 2,2'-biimidazole ligands in trivalent chromium complexes.
Julien ChongAmina BenchohraCéline BesnardLaure GuénéeArnulf RosspeintnerCarlos M CruzJuan-Ramón JiménezClaude PiguetPublished in: Dalton transactions (Cambridge, England : 2003) (2024)
Complete or partial replacement of well-known five-membered chelating 2,2'-bipyridine (bipy) or 1,10-phenanthroline (phen) ligands with analogous didentate 2,2'-biimidazole (H 2 biim) provides novel perspectives for exploiting the latter pH-tuneable bridging unit for connecting inert trivalent chromium with cationic partners. The most simple homoleptic complex [Cr(H 2 biim) 3 ] 3+ and its stepwise deprotonated analogues are only poorly soluble in most solvents and their characterization is limited to some solid-state structures, in which the pseudo-octahedral [CrN 6 ] units are found to be intermolecularly connected via peripheral N-H⋯X hydrogen bonds. Moreover, the associated high-energy stretching N-H vibrations drastically quench the targeted near infrared (NIR) Cr III -based phosphorescence, which makes these homoleptic building blocks incompatible with the design of molecular-based luminescent assemblies. Restricting the number of bound 2,2'-biimidazole ligands to a single unit in the challenging heteroleptic [Cr(phen) 2 (H x biim)] (1+ x )+ ( x = 2-0) complexes overcomes the latter limitations and allows (i) the synthesis and characterization of these [CrN 6 ] chromophores in the solid state and in solution, (ii) the stepwise and controlled deprotonation of the bound 2,2'-biimidazole ligand and (iii) the implementation of Cr-centered phosphorescence with energies, lifetimes and quantum yields adapted for using the latter chromophores as sensitizers in promising 'complex-as-ligand' strategies.