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Phenyl-pyta-tricarbonylrhenium(i) complexes: combining a simplified structure and steric hindrance to modulate the photoluminescence properties
Author(s) -
Alexandre Poirot,
Corinne VanucciBacqué,
Béatrice DelavauxNicot,
Nadine Leygue,
Nathalie SaffonMerceron,
Fabienne Alary,
Florence BedosBelval,
Éric Benoist,
Suzanne FeryForgues
Publication year - 2021
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/d1dt02161c
Subject(s) - phosphorescence , photoluminescence , chemistry , steric effects , luminescence , moiety , denticity , photochemistry , ligand (biochemistry) , quantum yield , substituent , excited state , fluorescence , crystallography , stereochemistry , materials science , crystal structure , biochemistry , physics , optoelectronics , receptor , quantum mechanics , nuclear physics
Strongly luminescent tricarbonylrhenium(I) complexes are promising candidates in the field of optical materials. In this study, three new complexes bearing a 3-(2-pyridyl)-1,2,4-triazole (pyta) bidentate ligand with an appended phenyl group were obtained in very good yields owing to an optimized synthetic procedure. The first member of this series, i.e. complex 1, was compared with the previously studied complex RePBO to understand the influence of the fluorescent benzoxazole unit grafted on the phenyl ring. Then, to gauge the effect of steric hindrance on the luminescence properties, the phenyl group of complex 1 was substituted in the para position by a bulky er -butyl group or an adamantyl moiety, affording complexes 2 and 3, respectively. The results of theoretical calculations indicated that these complexes were quite similar from an electronic point of view, as evidenced by the electrochemical study. In dichloromethane solution, under excitation in the UV range, all the complexes emitted weak phosphorescence in the red region. In the solid state, they could be excited in the blue region of the visible spectrum and they emitted strong yellow light. The photoluminescence quantum yield was markedly increased with raising the size of the substituent, passing from 0.42 for 1 to 0.59 for 3. The latter complex also exhibited clear waveguiding properties, unprecedented for rhenium complexes. From this point of view, these easy-synthesized and spectroscopically attractive complexes constitute a new generation of emitters for use in imaging applications and functional materials. However, the comparison with RePBO showed that the presence of the benzoxazole group leads to unsurpassed mechanoresponsive luminescence (MRL) properties, due to the involvement of a unique photophysical mechanism that takes place only in this type of complex.

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