Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes

Metal complexes with ligands that have charge-transfer electronic structure can lead to interesting interplay between metal-to-ligand and intra-ligand charge transfer excited states (MLCT and ILCT respectively). In a systematic study of [ReCl(CO)3(dppz-(linker)-TPA)] complexes (Figure 1), we find a...

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Main Author: Gordon, Keith
Other Authors: Asian Spectroscopy Conference 2020
Format: Conference or Workshop Item
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144289
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1442892020-10-29T20:10:55Z Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes Gordon, Keith Asian Spectroscopy Conference 2020 Institute of Advanced Studies Science::Chemistry Resonance Raman Spectroscopy Excited-state Spectroscopy Metal complexes with ligands that have charge-transfer electronic structure can lead to interesting interplay between metal-to-ligand and intra-ligand charge transfer excited states (MLCT and ILCT respectively). In a systematic study of [ReCl(CO)3(dppz-(linker)-TPA)] complexes (Figure 1), we find a long-lived excited state that is 3ILCT in nature. This is characterized through transient absorption and emission, transient resonance Raman (TR2), time-resolved infrared (TRIR) spectroscopy and TDDFT calculations. Modulation of the donor and acceptor energies results in changes of the 3ILCT lifetime by one order of magnitude, ranging from 6.1 (± 1) μs when a diphenylamine donor is used to 0.6 (± 0.2) μs when a triazole linker and triphenylamine donor is used. The excited state lifetime may be rationalized by consideration of the driving force within the framework of Marcus theory, and appears insensitive to the nature of the linker. [1,2] However we show in studies of ILCT systems with 1,10-phanthroline ligands the interactions between the MLCT and ILCT states is stronger leading to unpredictable behaviour. For example simple donor tuning using electron withdrawing and donating groups results in emission spectra that appear unchanged with substituent yet actually arise from different states.[3] Published version 2020-10-27T02:30:33Z 2020-10-27T02:30:33Z 2020 Conference Paper Gordon, K. (2020). Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes. Proc. Of the 7th Asian Spectroscopy Conference (ASC 2020). doi:10.32655/ASC_8-10_Dec2020.41 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144289 10.32655/ASC_8-10_Dec2020.41 en © 2020 Nanyang Technological University. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Science::Chemistry
Resonance Raman Spectroscopy
Excited-state Spectroscopy
spellingShingle Science::Chemistry
Resonance Raman Spectroscopy
Excited-state Spectroscopy
Gordon, Keith
Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes
description Metal complexes with ligands that have charge-transfer electronic structure can lead to interesting interplay between metal-to-ligand and intra-ligand charge transfer excited states (MLCT and ILCT respectively). In a systematic study of [ReCl(CO)3(dppz-(linker)-TPA)] complexes (Figure 1), we find a long-lived excited state that is 3ILCT in nature. This is characterized through transient absorption and emission, transient resonance Raman (TR2), time-resolved infrared (TRIR) spectroscopy and TDDFT calculations. Modulation of the donor and acceptor energies results in changes of the 3ILCT lifetime by one order of magnitude, ranging from 6.1 (± 1) μs when a diphenylamine donor is used to 0.6 (± 0.2) μs when a triazole linker and triphenylamine donor is used. The excited state lifetime may be rationalized by consideration of the driving force within the framework of Marcus theory, and appears insensitive to the nature of the linker. [1,2] However we show in studies of ILCT systems with 1,10-phanthroline ligands the interactions between the MLCT and ILCT states is stronger leading to unpredictable behaviour. For example simple donor tuning using electron withdrawing and donating groups results in emission spectra that appear unchanged with substituent yet actually arise from different states.[3]
author2 Asian Spectroscopy Conference 2020
author_facet Asian Spectroscopy Conference 2020
Gordon, Keith
format Conference or Workshop Item
author Gordon, Keith
author_sort Gordon, Keith
title Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes
title_short Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes
title_full Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes
title_fullStr Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes
title_full_unstemmed Interplay of MLCT and ILCT states in rhenium(I) complexes
title_sort interplay of mlct and ilct states in rhenium(i) complexes
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144289
_version_ 1683493358975057920