A Deep Insight into the Photoluminescence Properties of Schiff Base CdII and ZnII Complexes.
Ishani MajumderPrateeti ChakrabortySanchari DasguptaChiara MasseraDaniel EscuderoDebasis DasPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2018)
A tridentate N,N,O donor ligand 2,4-dichloro-2-[(2-piperazine-4-yl-ethylimino)-methyl]-phenol (HL) was designed, and eight new ZnII and CdII complexes, namely, [Zn(LH)(SCN)2] (1), [Zn(LH)(N3)2] (2), [Zn(LH)(NO2)2] (3), [Zn(LH)(dca)(OAc)] (4), [Cd2(LH)2(SCN)4] (5), [Cd(LH)(N3)2] (6), [Cd(LH)(NO2)2] (7), and [Cd(LH)(dca)(OAc)] (8) [where dca = dicyanamide anion] were synthesized. Five of them (1, 2, 4, 5, 7) were structurally characterized through single-crystal X-ray diffraction analysis. H-Bonding interactions are found to be the major stabilizing factor for crystallization in the solid state. Experimental and computational studies were performed in cooperation to provide a rationalization of the photoluminescence properties of those complexes. The quantum yields are anion-dependent, with enhanced efficiencies in the following order: LH < Cd-SCN(5) < Cd-dca(8) < Cd-N3(6) < Cd-NO2(7) < Zn-dca(4) < Zn-N3(2) < ZnNO2(3) < ZnSCN(1). By using quantum chemical calculations we rationalized the above trends. Moreover, the diverse lifetimes observed for those eight complexes were also quantitatively explained by considering the subtle competition between different photo-deactivation pathways.