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Luminescence and Light-Driven Energy and Electron Transfer from an Exceptionally Long-Lived Excited State of a Non-Innocent Chromium(III) Complex.

Steffen TreilingCui WangChristoph FörsterFlorian ReichenauerJens KalmbachPit BodenJoe P HarrisLuca M CarrellaEva RentschlerUte Resch-GengerChristian ReberMichael SeitzMarkus GerhardsKatja Heinze
Published in: Angewandte Chemie (International ed. in English) (2019)
Photoactive metal complexes employing Earth-abundant metal ions are a key to sustainable photophysical and photochemical applications. We exploit the effects of an inversion center and ligand non-innocence to tune the luminescence and photochemistry of the excited state of the [CrN6 ] chromophore [Cr(tpe)2 ]3+ with close to octahedral symmetry (tpe=1,1,1-tris(pyrid-2-yl)ethane). [Cr(tpe)2 ]3+ exhibits the longest luminescence lifetime (τ=4500 μs) reported up to date for a molecular polypyridyl chromium(III) complex together with a very high luminescence quantum yield of Φ=8.2 % at room temperature in fluid solution. Furthermore, the tpe ligands in [Cr(tpe)2 ]3+ are redox non-innocent, leading to reversible reductive chemistry. The excited state redox potential and lifetime of [Cr(tpe)2 ]3+ surpass those of the classical photosensitizer [Ru(bpy)3 ]2+ (bpy=2,2'-bipyridine) enabling energy transfer (to oxygen) and photoredox processes (with azulene and tri(n-butyl)amine).
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • quantum dots
  • electron transfer
  • room temperature
  • photodynamic therapy
  • ionic liquid
  • computed tomography
  • molecular dynamics
  • human health