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Design Strategies for Luminescent Titanocenes: Improving the Photoluminescence and Photostability of Arylethynyltitanocenes.

Matilda BarkerThomas J WhittemoreHenry C LondonJack M SledeskyElizabeth A HarrisTiffany M Smith PellizzeriColin D McMillenPaul S Wagenknecht
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2023)
Complexes that undergo ligand-to-metal charge transfer (LMCT) to d 0 metals are of interest as possible photocatalysts. Cp 2 Ti(C 2 Ph) 2 (where C 2 Ph = phenylethynyl) was reported to be weakly emissive in room-temperature (RT) fluid solution from its phenylethynyl-to-Ti 3 LMCT state but readily photodecomposes. Coordination of CuX between the alkyne ligands to give Cp 2 Ti(C 2 Ph) 2 CuX (X = Cl, Br) has been shown to significantly increase the photostability, but such complexes are not emissive in RT solution. Herein, we investigate whether inhibition of alkyne-Ti-alkyne bond compression might be responsible for the increased photostability of the CuX complexes by investigating the decomposition of a structurally constrained analogue, Cp 2 Ti(OBET) (OBET = o -bis(ethynyl)tolane). To investigate the mechanism of nonradiative decay from the 3 LMCT states in Cp 2 Ti(C 2 Ph) 2 CuX, the photophysical properties were investigated both upon deuteration and upon rigidifying in a poly(methyl methacrylate) film. These investigations suggested that inhibition of structural rearrangement may play a dominant role in increasing emission lifetimes and quantum yields. The bulkier Cp* 2 Ti(C 2 Ph) 2 CuBr was prepared and is emissive at 693 nm in RT THF solution with a photoluminescent quantum yield of 1.3 × 10 -3 (τ = 0.18 μs). Time-dependent density functional theory (TDDFT) calculations suggest that emission occurs from a 3 LMCT state dominated by Cp*-to-Ti charge transfer.
Keyphrases
  • density functional theory
  • room temperature
  • molecular dynamics
  • quantum dots
  • light emitting
  • solid state
  • risk assessment
  • energy transfer
  • sensitive detection
  • reduced graphene oxide
  • visible light