Excited State Dynamics of Bistridentate and Trisbidentate RuII Complexes of Quinoline-Pyrazole Ligands
Author(s) -
Lisa A. Fredin,
Joachim Hedberg Wallenstein,
Elin Sundin,
Martin Jarenmark,
Deise F. Barbosa de Mattos,
Petter Persson,
Maria Abrahamsson
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
inorganic chemistry
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.348
H-Index - 233
eISSN - 1520-510X
pISSN - 0020-1669
DOI - 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01543
Subject(s) - chemistry , homoleptic , pyrazole , quinoline , excited state , photochemistry , ruthenium , ligand (biochemistry) , ultrafast laser spectroscopy , time dependent density functional theory , microsecond , denticity , population , density functional theory , crystallography , metal , computational chemistry , stereochemistry , spectroscopy , crystal structure , organic chemistry , atomic physics , catalysis , physics , biochemistry , receptor , demography , quantum mechanics , astronomy , sociology
Three homoleptic ruthenium(II) complexes, [Ru(Q3PzH) 3 ] 2+ , [Ru(Q1Pz) 3 ] 2+ , and [Ru(DQPz) 2 ] 2+ , based on the quinoline-pyrazole ligands, Q3PzH (8-(3-pyrazole)-quinoline), Q1Pz (8-(1-pyrazole)-quinoline), and DQPz (bis(quinolinyl)-1,3-pyrazole), have been spectroscopically and theoretically investigated. Spectral component analysis, transient absorption spectroscopy, density functional theory calculations, and ligand exchange reactions with different chlorination agents reveal that the excited state dynamics for Ru(II) complexes with these biheteroaromatic ligands differ significantly from that of traditional polypyridyl complexes. Despite the high energy and low reorganization energy of the excited state, nonradiative decay dominates even at liquid nitrogen temperatures, where triplet metal-to-ligand-charge-transfer emission quantum yields range from 0.7 to 3.8%, and microsecond excited state lifetimes are observed. In contrast to traditional polypyridyl complexes where ligand exchange is facilitated by expansion of the metal-ligand bonds to stabilize a metal-centered state, photoinduced ligand exchange occurs in the bidentate complexes despite no substantial MC state population, while the tridentate complex is extremely photostable despite an activated decay route, highlighting the versatile photochemistry of nonpolypyridine ligands.
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