Energy transfer and photoluminescence properties of lanthanide-containing polyoxotitanate cages coordinated by salicylate ligands
Author(s) -
Ning Li,
Gomathy Sandhya Subramanian,
Peter D. Matthews,
James Xiao,
Vijila Chellappan,
Timothy E. Rosser,
Erwin Reisner,
HeKuan Luo,
Dominic S. Wright
Publication year - 2018
Publication title -
dalton transactions
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.98
H-Index - 184
eISSN - 1477-9234
pISSN - 1477-9226
DOI - 10.1039/c8dt00825f
Subject(s) - lanthanide , photoluminescence , energy transfer , chemistry , photochemistry , combinatorial chemistry , chemical engineering , materials science , polymer chemistry , nanotechnology , organic chemistry , optoelectronics , ion , chemical physics , engineering
Polyoxotitanate (POT) cages have attracted considerable attention recently; much of this from the fact that they can be considered to be structural models for the technologically important semiconductor TiO2. Among the reported POT cages, lanthanide-containing (Ln-POT) cages are of particular interest owing to the fascinating luminescence properties of Ln3+ ions and the versatile coordination environments that they can adopt. In the present study, we report the energy transfer mechanism and photoluminescence properties of a series of isostructural Ln-POT cages coordinated by salicylate ligands, of general formula [LnTi6O3(OiPr)9(salicylate)6] (Ln-1, Ln = La to Er excluding Pm). Both visible (for Pr-1, Sm-1, Eu-1, Ho-1 and Er-1) and near-infrared (for Nd-1 and Er-1) Ln3+-centred photoluminescence can be sensitised in solution, and most importantly, their excitation bands all extend well into the visible region up to 475 nm. With the assistance of steady-state and time-resolved photoluminescence spectroscopy, an energy-transfer mechanism involving the salicylate-to-Ti4+ charge-transfer state is proposed to account for the largely red-shifted excitation wavelengths of these Ln-1 cages. The photoluminescence quantum yield of Nd-1 upon excitation via the charge-transfer state reaches 0.30 ± 0.01% in solution, making it among the highest reported values for Nd3+-complexes in the literature.
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