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Enhancement of the Luminescent Efficiency in Carbene-Au(I)-Aryl Complexes by the Restriction of Renner-Teller Distortion and Bond Rotation.

Tian-Yi LiDaniel Sylvinson Muthiah RavinsonRalf HaigesPeter I DjurovichMark E Thompson
Published in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2020)
A series of (carbene)Au(I)(aryl) complexes are reported. The nature of the lowest excited state in these complexes changes character from metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) to interligand charge transfer (ICT) with increasing electron-donating strength of the aryl ligand. Complexes that have the MLCT lowest excited state undergo a Renner-Teller bending distortion upon excitation. Such a distortion leads to a large rate of nonradiative decay, on the order of 108 s-1. Renner-Teller-based nonradiative decay does not occur in chromophores with an ICT emissive state. Introducing a julolidine moiety and ortho-methyl substituents to the aryl group makes the molecule rigid and hinders the rotation along the Au-Caryl-coordinate bond. Consequently, the nonradiative decay rates of these ICT emitters are decreased and become lower than the radiative decay rate constants (kr = 105 s-1). Thus, high-luminescent efficiencies (ΦPL = 0.61 and 0.77) along with short lifetimes (τ < 2 μs) are obtained for yellow and green emitters, respectively. Thermally assisted delayed fluorescence behavior is observed, owing to the small exchange energy (ΔEST < 1600 cm-1) in these emitters.
Keyphrases
  • light emitting
  • sensitive detection
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • gold nanoparticles