Laura A.
Büldt†
and
Oliver S.
Wenger
*
Department of Chemistry, University of Basel, St. Johanns-Ring 19, 4056 Basel, Switzerland. E-mail: oliver.wenger@unibas.ch
First published on 14th September 2017
Some complexes of Cr(III) and Cr(0) have long been known to exhibit interesting photophysical and photochemical properties, but in the past few years important conceptual progress was made. This Perspective focuses on the recent developments of Cr(III) complexes as luminophores and dyes for solar cells, their application in photoredox catalysis, their use as sensitizers in upconversion processes, and their performance as photochemical nitric oxide sources. The example of a luminescent Cr(0) isocyanide complex illustrates the possibility of obtaining photoactive analogues of d6 metal complexes that are commonly made from precious metals such as Ru(II) or Ir(III). The studies highlighted herein illustrate the favorable excited-state properties of robust first-row transition metal complexes with broad application potential.
Fig. 1 (a) Tanabe–Sugano diagram for the d3 electron configuration. (b) Relevant frontier orbitals for low-spin octahedral d6 metal complexes with low-lying ligand-based π* orbitals. |
Cr(0) complexes can be stabilized with π-accepting ligands such as carbonyl or isocyanides. While Cr(CO)6 and related carbonyls were mostly investigated with respect to photoinduced ligand dissociation reactions,7 Cr(0) complexes with arylisocyanide ligands seemed promising for obtaining emissive 3MLCT excited states.8–11 In the low-spin d6 electron configuration, such MLCT states can become the lowest electronically excited states for ligands with accessible empty π* orbitals (Fig. 1b). Ru(II) polypyridines and cyclometalated Ir(III) complexes are currently the most prominent 3MLCT emitters with d6 electron configuration,12 but early studies already indicated that Cr(0) arylisocyanides have the potential to become earth-abundant alternatives to these precious metals.8,9
With both Cr(III) and Cr(0) important progress was made in recent years. Efficient near-infrared photoluminescence from Cr(III) complexes in aqueous solution at room temperature became possible due to advanced ligand design,13 new synthetic approaches gave access to heteroleptic Cr(III) complexes that can be grafted onto semiconductors,14 and Cr(III) complexes were successfully employed for photoredox catalysis of Diels–Alder reactions.15–17 Moreover, when incorporated into helical structures along with Er(III), Cr(III) complexes were able to sensitize near-infrared to visible upconversion for the first time in molecular systems.18 Chelating diisocyanide ligands proved useful for obtaining a luminescent Cr(0) complex that is an emissive analogue of Fe(bpy)32+ (bpy = 2,2′-bipyridine) with a spectacularly long 3MLCT lifetime compared to all previously known isoelectronic Fe(II) complexes.19 All these recent advances are summarized and discussed in the following sections, and they illustrate the broad current interest in chromium as a key constituent of photoactive metal complexes.
Fig. 2 (a) Tridentate ligand that can chelate Cr(III) with a N–Cr–N bite angle close to 90 °C. (b) Resulting bis(terdentate) Cr(III) complex. (c) Luminescence spectrum of this complex in de-aerated H2O at room temperature following excitation at 435 nm. Reproduced with permission from ref. 13. Copyright 2015 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA. |
Complex | τ [μs] | ϕ |
---|---|---|
a In aqueous solution at room temperature; from ref. 3,4 and 13. | ||
Cr(L1)33+ | 898 | 11.0% |
Cr(bpy)33+ | 63 | 0.089% |
Cr(phen)33+ | 270 | 0.15% |
Cr(tpy)23+ | <30 | <0.00089% |
Thus, Cr(L1)23+ is a robust near-infrared emitter with unusually high luminescence quantum yield and excited state lifetime in aqueous solution. In this respect, it is a unique Cr(III) polypyridine complex.13 In a subsequent study the focus was on the temperature dependence of the luminescence emitted by Cr(L1)23+ in aqueous and organic media.21 Emission from both the 2E and 2T1 excited states (Fig. 1a) is observable in the 210–373 K temperature range, and their relative contribution is governed by Boltzmann's law. Thus, the Cr(L1)23+ complex can be used as a contactless molecular thermometer, operating on the basis of ratiometric 2E vs.2T1 luminescence intensity, and this was put in evidence by incorporating it into polystyrene nanoparticles and micelles. It was noted that this could lead to applications in biology, medicine, and material sciences.21
Mn(IV) is isoelectronic with Cr(III), but until very recently luminescence from molecular Mn(IV) compounds had not been reported yet. Now, a bis-tris(carbene)borate complex of Mn(IV) was found to emit from the 2E state at 85 K in the solid state.22
Fig. 3 Ligands used for the synthesis of heteroleptic Cr(III) complexes with a view to grafting them onto p-type semiconductor surfaces.14 |
Complex | E 0 (CrL3*3+/2+)/V vs. SCE |
---|---|
a From ref. 14, in CH3CN, converted from V vs. Fc+/Fc to V vs. SCE according to ref. 24. b From ref. 15. For the determination of these potentials, the reader is referred to the original literature. | |
Cr(bpy)33+ | 1.46a |
Cr(phen)33+ | 1.43a |
Cr(L2)33+ | 1.82a |
Cr(L3)33+ | 1.40b |
The investigated complexes exhibited photophysical and electrochemical properties that are in line with prior studies of structurally related homoleptic Cr(III) polypyridines. Ligand L2 seemed to weaken the ligand field in Cr(L2)(L5)23+, thereby decreasing the activation energy for nonradiative relaxation from the emissive 2E state by several kJ mol−1 relative to homoleptic Cr(L5)33+.14 Redox potentials up to 1.82 V vs. SCE were determined for reduction of the photoexcited Cr(III) complexes, owing to the electron-withdrawing nature of L2 (Table 2). Considering these strongly oxidizing properties and the long excited state lifetimes (7.7–108 μs) in solution, the use of these heteroleptic complexes for hole injection into p-type semiconductors is indeed promising. A significant drawback is their relatively weak absorption in the visible spectral range. The most favorable example in this respect was Cr(L2)(L4)23+, which exhibits a molar absorptivity of 1270 M−1 cm−1 at 491 nm.
Damrauer, Shores, and coworkers noted that their study was the first on heteroleptic Cr(III) dipyridyl complexes with at least one carboxylate group for eventual attachment to semiconductors.14 All their studies were performed in presence of 1 M acid, because Cr(III) polypyridine complexes have long been known to hydrolyze in alkaline solution.20
Fig. 4 Cycloaddition reactions catalyzed by photoexcited Cr(III) complexes.15 |
The combination of electron-rich dienophiles with dienes that are more difficult to oxidize was very successful in this respect, because it allowed the Cr(III) catalysts to discriminate between the two reactants. Cr(L3)33+ was used for this purpose, since its somewhat lower oxidation potential (Table 2) was expected to accentuate selective dienophile oxidation.15 Electron-rich styrenes turned out to be the optimal dienophiles for reaction with isoprene (Fig. 4b) or 2,3-dimethyl-1,3-butadiene (Fig. 4c), yielding more than 15 different Diels–Alder adducts in good to excellent yields under irradiation with 300–419 nm light in CH3NO2. Different functional groups (ethers, esters, and sulfonates) were tolerated and high diastereoselectivities were achieved.
While early studies had already explored the photooxidizing properties of Cr(III) complexes from a fundamental perspective,4–6 the study by Shores, Ferreira, and coworkers was the first to apply Cr(III) complexes as photocatalysts in organic synthesis.15 This represents the key novelty of their work, but conceptually very similar organic transformations had been performed earlier by photoredox catalysis with Ru(bpz)32+.25 Mechanistic aspects of the Cr(III) photoredox catalysis initially remained somewhat unclear, in particular with regard to the role of O2, which was found to be a critically important ingredient for the overall reaction.15
Subsequent investigations revealed that O2 interferes in two ways in the overall catalysis.16 On the one hand, it is able to act as an energy acceptor vis-à-vis photoexcited Cr(III) complexes, thereby forming singlet oxygen. On the other hand, oxygen was also found to act as an electron acceptor in the catalytic cycle, but only in its 1O2 form. Based on detailed electrochemical and spectroscopic investigations, catalysis studies, electronic structure calculations, and a variety of different control experiments, a mechanism taking into account both the energy transfer and the electron transfer pathway was proposed (Fig. 5).16 In this mechanism, photoexcited Cr(III) undergoes competitive reductive quenching by dienophile substrates (1) and energy transfer quenching by 3O2 to form 1O2. For instance, para-anethole (1) is oxidized to its radical cation form (1+), which can then undergo reaction with the diene (2) to result in a cycloadduct radical cation (3+), while the chromium complex is reduced. Meanwhile, other photoexcited Cr(III) complexes undergo energy transfer quenching to result in 1O2, and the latter is then able to re-oxidize CrL32+ to CrL33+, thereby closing the catalytic cycle for the chromium complex and resulting in the formation of O2−. These superoxide anions then reduce the cycloadduct radical cation (3+) to the final Diels–Alder product (3), and with 3O2 as an oxidation product of this reaction, the catalytic cycle for oxygen is closed. Recent computational studies by other researchers complement this mechanistic picture and give insights into the origin of the chemo- and regioselectivity of the overall reaction.26
Fig. 5 Plausible mechanism for the light-driven [4 + 2] cycloaddition reaction between a dienophile (1) and a diene (2) catalyzed by the Cr(L3)33+ complex in presence of oxygen.16 |
This rather complex catalytic cycle relies on the long 2E excited-state lifetime of Cr(III) complexes (13 μs for Cr(L3)33+ under the conditions used here), which permits the build-up of substantial concentrations of 1O2 (τ = 40 μs) and ultimately O2−. By contrast, Ru(bpz)32+ photoredox catalysis of closely related reactions seems to operate mainly through a radical propagation mechanism,27 possibly because Ru(bpz)32+ has a much shorter excited-state lifetime (<0.9 μs), leading to comparatively low 1O2 and O2− concentrations. In the radical chain mechanism (not included in Fig. 5), the hexenyl radical cation (3+) reacts with dienophile 1 to product 3 and radical cation 1+. It was noted that small changes in environmental conditions could allow switching between photocatalytic and radical chain pathways in the chromium systems as well.16
In further studies, the same authors were able to perform chromium-catalyzed [4 + 2] cycloaddition reactions with electron-deficient dienophiles,17 thereby going significantly beyond the substrate scope initially explored with Ru(bpz)32+ (Fig. 6).25 Enone 4 has an oxidation potential (Eox) of 2.0 V vs. SCE and therefore cannot be oxidized by photoexcited Cr(L3)33+, because the latter has an oxidation potential of only 1.33 V vs. SCE in CH3NO2. Nevertheless, in presence of isoprene (2) (Eox = 1.98 V vs. SCE), photoirradiation of Cr(L3)33+ leads to conversion of enone 4 to the cycloaddition product 5 in good yield (Fig. 6a), and this transformation works for several differently substituted chalcone derivatives.17 Interestingly, the regioselectivity of this cycloaddition is always in favor of the reversed Diels–Alder adduct, opposite to what is commonly observed, and the reaction conditions were tolerant of a variety of functional groups on the diene.
Fig. 6 (a) Diels–Alder reaction between chalcone derivative 4 and isoprene 2.17 (b) Possible mechanistic pathways. Reproduced from ref. 17 – Published by The Royal Society of Chemistry. |
Three different reaction mechanisms were considered theoretically viable, and two of them were identified as significant contributors. In the first mechanism (pathway A in Fig. 6b), there is an initial organic photochemical step in which [2 + 2] cycloaddition between the two substrates occurs. The resulting vinylcyclobutane (6) species (Eox = 1.68 V vs. SCE) is oxidized much more readily than 2 and 4, and consequently can undergo single-electron oxidative vinylcyclobutane rearrangement to yield 5 after photoexcitation of Cr(L3)33+. In control experiments without Cr catalyst, the vinylcyclobutane 6 was directly observable, confirming that pathway A is indeed viable. Pathway B recognizes that dimerization of enone 4 yields a compound (7) with a relatively low redox potential (Eox = 1.4 V vs. SCE), and after oxidation of the dimer (7) by photoexcited Cr(L3)33+, cycloreversion to radical cation 4+ could occur, followed by reaction of the latter with the diene (2). However, control experiments indicate that pathway B is a minor contributor at most. In pathway C, photoexcited enone (4*) is taken into account. This species was previously reported to have excited-state lifetimes between 20 and 30 ns,28 and the photoexcited Cr(L3)33+ complex is thermodynamically competent to oxidize 4* to 4+. Once formed, radical cation 4+ can then undergo reaction with the diene (2). Pathway C is unusual in that two photoexcited species are proposed to come to reaction with one another, but preliminary experiments did indeed seem to reveal a nonlinear dependency of the overall rate of reactivity on the light intensity. The long 2E excited-state lifetime of the Cr(III) complexes is certainly helpful in this context. Radical chain mechanisms do not seem to be involved, and oxygen is still beneficial to the overall reaction progress, but not to the same extent as in the reactions from Fig. 4 and 5.
Heinze and coworkers recently explored the reaction pathways leading to oxidative C–H bond functionalization in tertiary amines under aerobic photoredox conditions with the Cr(L1)23+ complex from Fig. 2b.29 Since the energy gap between the 2E and 4T2 excited states is very large in this particular case, and because the 2E state is not expected to be particularly redox-active (due to the fact that it derives from the same t2g3 electron configuration as the ground state), it was explored whether energy (EnT) or electron transfer mechanisms are operative in the photo-cyanation of tertiary amines in presence of oxygen. Indeed, the key conclusion is that 1O2 is rapidly generated (ΔGEnT = −0.62 eV; kEnT = 1.2 × 108 M−1 s−1), and 1O2 then initiates the reaction with the α-C–H bonds of amines. The high selectivity for the energy transfer mechanism in this case is very likely due to the thermal inaccessibility of the redox-active 4T2 state in this particular complex, and this is in marked contrast to the other Cr(III) polypyridine complexes discussed in this subsection.
Building on profound expertise in lanthanide chemistry and helical molecular structures, Piguet in collaboration with Hauser and their coworkers recently took an innovative approach to achieving transition metal sensitized lanthanide upconversion.18,30 The trimetallic compound in Fig. 7a combines a central Er(III) ion with two flanking Cr(α-diimine)33+ complexes in a kinetically inert helical structure made from 3 intertwined ligands (Fig. 7b). The central lanthanide ion (Ln) is in pseudo-tricapped trigonal prismatic coordination, and at 10 K it luminesces from multiple excited states upon UV-excitation. Following laser irradiation at 750 nm into the 2E absorption of the Cr(α-diimine)33+ sensitizers with excitation densities between 195 and 690 mW mm−2, upconversion luminescence at ∼540 nm emitted from the Er(III) 4S3/2 state was observed at 10 K (Fig. 7c).18 This finding is spectacular because it represents the first observation of near-infrared to visible photon upconversion in an isolated molecular system.18,30
Fig. 7 (a) Triple-stranded helix incorporating a central Er(III) ion flanked by two CrN63+ units; the three identical ligands are represented in different colors. Reproduced with permission from ref. 30. Copyright 2012 Elsevier. (b) Ligand used for formation of the helix. (c) Upconverted 4S3/2 → 4I15/2 luminescence emitted from Er(III) after excitation of the CrN63+ units at 13360 cm−1. The helix was present at 10 mM concentration in CH3CN at ∼30 K, and an excitation density of 400 mW mm−2 was used. Reproduced with permission from ref. 18. Copyright 2011 Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA. |
The Cr(α-diimine)33+ sensitizer is exquisitely suited for this purpose not only because it gives access to a kinetically inert helical structure with Er(III), but also because its various excited states are just at the right energies (Fig. 8). The 2E state is slightly above the Er(III) 4I9/2 multiplet, making intramolecular energy transfer (EnT) with a rate constant of ∼500 s−1 possible.18 Nonradiative relaxation of 4I9/2 populates the 4I11/2 and 4I13/2 states (gray dashed downward arrow in Fig. 8). In particular the latter has a long lifetime, and from there the green emissive 4S3/2 state can be reached by a so-called energy transfer upconversion process (right part of Fig. 8).34 In structurally related Cr(III)–Er(III) dimers, the upconversion intensity measured under identical excitation conditions as for a Cr(III)–Er(III)–Cr(III) trimer is 4–10 times weaker, illustrating that the sensitizer to activator ratio is an important factor.35 The observation that the upconversion efficiency enhancement is greater than statistically expected when increasing the number of Cr(III) sensitizers from 1 to 2 (i.e., greater than a factor of 4), might be an indication for an additional upconversion mechanism, in which two excitations are stored on separate Cr(III) sensitizers prior to energy transfer to Er(III).36
Fig. 8 Energy-level scheme for the Cr(III)–Er(III)–Cr(III) helix from Fig. 7 illustrating the near-infrared to visible upconversion process. EnT stands for energy transfer. The dashed gray downward represents nonradiative relaxation. Reproduced with permission from ref. 30. Copyright 2012 Elsevier. |
Unfortunately, Cr(α-diimine)33+ complexes do not represent the universal solution to achieving near-infrared to visible upconversion with lanthanides. In a Cr(III)–Tm(III)–Cr(III) trimer, the targeted blue Tm(III) 1G4 → 3H6 emission is quenched by energy transfer to the Cr(III) 4T2 state, and in a Cr(III)–Ho(III)–Cr(III) molecule the desired energy transfer from the Cr(III) 2E state to Ho(III) is too slow (<100 s−1).35 Thus, so far the combination of Cr(III) and Er(III) is unique in these helical systems. Aside from careful matching of excited state energies between sensitizer and activator, the successful protection of the Er(III) ion from high-energy oscillators in the helical structure is a key factor for upconversion. Without this, the 4S3/2 state would simply deactivate nonradiatively.
The combination of Cr(α-diimine)33+ sensitizers with either Nd(III) or Yb(III) in closely related di- and trinuclear helical structures results in an interesting fundamental observation, which could have important practical implications. In these compounds, excitation of the Cr(III) sensitizers in the visible spectral range leads to lanthanide-based emission in the near-infrared with apparent lifetimes in the millisecond regime.37 This is possible because the long-lived 2E state of Cr(III) serves as an energy storage reservoir and feeding level for lanthanide sensitization in the case of Nd(III), Er(III), and Yb(III). For instance, in a Cr(III)–Yb(III)–Cr(III) molecule, the Yb(III) 2F5/2 → 2F7/2 emission at ∼1000 nm decays with τ ≈ 1.3 ms, and in a Cr(III)–Nd(III)–Cr(III) helix the Nd(III) 4F3/2 → 4I11/2 luminescence at ∼1055 nm decays with τ ≈ 0.25 ms at 10 K. If this could be exploited at room temperature in solution, it could become interesting for time-gated luminescence detection in biological tissue.
In this context, the Ford group explored the water-soluble trans-Cr(cyclam) (ONO)2+ complex (cyclam = 1,4,8,11-tetraazacycltetradecane) (Fig. 9a) which undergoes reversible photochemical NO release.38 The initial photochemical step occurs from a spin-flip (doublet) excited state and leads to homolytic dissociation of NO from a coordinated nitrite and a Cr(IV) intermediate (right part of Fig. 9b). In anaerobic media, this Cr(IV) complex reacts back with NO with a second-order rate constant of 3.06 × 106 M−1 s−1, but under aerobic conditions Cr(IV) is oxidized more rapidly to a Cr(V) complex (Fig. 9b). The quantum yield for NO release following excitation into the spin-allowed (quartet–quartet) d–d transition at 436 nm (λmax = 476 nm, ε = 40 M−1 cm−1) is 0.27 ± 0.03.38 Photoaquation (left part of Fig. 9b) only has a quantum yield of 0.0092 ± 0.0008.
Fig. 9 (a) Chemical structure of the trans-Cr(cyclam)(ONO)2+ complex. (b) Photochemistry of this complex. Adapted with permission from ref. 38. Copyright 1999 American Chemical Society. |
Oxidative trapping of the Cr(IV) intermediate presumably leads to the formation of superoxide, and this in turn intercepts a fraction of the photochemically released NO through formation of peroxynitrite (ONOO−).40 In presence of 5 mM glutathione in pH 7.4 aqueous buffer solution the Cr(IV) intermediate is reduced sufficiently fast to a Cr(III) product, outcompeting the (undesired) thermal back reaction (NO binding). It was noted that this is ideal for applications where nitric oxide needs to be generated in hypoxic, reducing environments that are typical for tumor tissues.
Lactate dehydrogenase assays indicated that the photochemically released NO and other reactive intermediates do not induce acute toxicity.40 Moreover, it could be demonstrated that low concentrations (3 μM) of the Cr(cyclam)(ONO)2+ complex are sufficient to induce vasorelaxation of porcine coronary arterial rings.41 This occurs through activation of the enzyme guanylyl cyclase by NO.
Although the photoactive doublet excited state is at ca. 14500 cm−1, the Cr(cyclam)(ONO)2+ complex absorbs only very weakly throughout the entire visible spectral range. In the NIR, where human tissue is more transparent, it does not absorb at all.40 Antenna systems were therefore explored for sensitization of NO release. CdSe/ZnS core/shell quantum dots led to a 15-fold enhancement of NO release relative to direct photolysis of aqueous solutions containing only Cr(cyclam)(ONO)2+.39,42,43 It was noted that functionalization of the quantum dots with proteins and antibodies could potentially be employed to target specific tissues for NO release.
A chelating diisocyanide ligand with sterically demanding substituents turned out to be well suited for obtaining a Cr(0) complex with a long-lived 3MLCT excited state (Fig. 10a).19,49 In de-aerated THF at 20 °C, the Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 complex luminesces with a quantum yield of ∼10−5 and a lifetime of 2.2 ns (inset in Fig. 10b). This is nearly two orders of magnitude longer than the current record 3MLCT lifetime of Fe(II) complexes (37 ps on Al2O3 nanofilms).51,52 UV-Vis absorption and luminescence spectra of Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 are reminiscent of those of Ru(bpy)32+ (Fig. 10b). The Cr(0) center can be oxidized up to Cr(III) in quasi-reversible fashion, but photochemically it can of course only act as a donor of single electrons. The excited-state oxidation potential for the Cr(I/*0) couple is −2.4 V vs. Fc+/Fc, making it a very strong photoreductant.19,49 For comparison, the Ru(III/*II) potential for Ru(bpy)32+ is −1.2 V vs. Fc+/Fc and the Ir(IV/*III) potential for fac-Ir(ppy)3 (ppy = 2-phenylpyridine) is −2.1 V vs. Fc+/Fc.57
Fig. 10 (a) Chemical structure of the Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 complex.19 (b) UV-Vis absorption and luminescence spectra of Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 in de-aerated THF at 20 °C. Excitation occurred at 450 nm. Inset: luminescence decay at 630 nm (red) and absorption bleach recovery at 485 nm (black) following excitation at 532 nm with pulses of ∼30 ps duration. Adapted with permission from ref. 19. Copyright 2017 American Chemical Society. |
An early study of a Cr(0) complex with monodentate arylisocyanide ligands found a luminescence lifetime shorter than 10 ns in a frozen glass at 77 K, from which it was concluded that the emissive excited state could have singlet parentage.9 In Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 the emissive MLCT state is quenched efficiently by anthracene, compatible with energy transfer from a triplet excited state.19,49 The triplet-excited anthracene molecules can subsequently undergo triplet–triplet annihilation upconversion, and thus Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 is an uncommon photosensitizer for a process that is more commonly sensitized by Ru(α-diimine)32+ complexes, Cu(I) complexes, or porphyrins.33,58 This suggests that the 3MLCT lifetime of Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 is sufficiently long for this complex to engage in bimolecular reactions, and this is promising in view of photoredox applications similar to those reported recently for a structurally similar Mo(0) tris(diisocyanide) complex.48,49
Given the long excited-state lifetime of Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3 compared to Fe(II) complexes, the use of Cr(0) isocyanides as dyes of wide bandgap semiconductor solar cells seems within reach. Considering the high reducing power of photoexcited Cr(CNtBuAr3NC)3, it is possible that semiconductors other than the commonly used TiO2 might lead to optimal energy matching between sensitizer LUMO and semiconductor conduction band.
Given the current interest in the use of photoactive metal complexes for various applications ranging from synthetic organic chemistry to solar energy conversion, it seems likely that this will trigger new fundamental discoveries in the development of non-traditional metal complexes with long-lived excited states. Creative approaches such as those outlined herein are in demand, making sure that a mature field such as coordination chemistry remains a key contributor to chemistry at large.71 Many different options are on the table, as illustrated herein on the specific example of chromium. New discoveries are possible with complexes emitting from ligand-field (typically spin-flip) excited states or from charge transfer excited states. Cr(III) with its d3 electron configuration or Cr(0) d6 complexes are only two possibilities among many others. There are several dn configurations in which the ligand field should be tunable to such an extent that emissive d–d excited states result, and charge transfer excited states are in principle accessible with many different metal–ligand combinations beyond the well-beaten path of d6, d8 or d10 metal diimines with precious metals.
Footnote |
† Current address: Institute of Inorganic Chemistry, University of Tübingen, Auf der Morgenstelle 18, 72076 Tübingen, Germany. |
This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2017 |