Issiah B.
Lozada
a,
J. A. Gareth
Williams
*b and
David E.
Herbert
*a
aDepartment of Chemistry and the Manitoba Institute for Materials, University of Manitoba, 144 Dysart Road, Winnipeg, Manitoba R3T 2N2, Canada. E-mail: david.herbert@umanitoba.ca
bDepartment of Chemistry, Durham University, Durham, DH1 3LE, UK. E-mail: j.a.g.williams@durham.ac.uk
First published on 27th October 2021
The synthesis, structural characterization and photophysical properties of a series of platinum(II) complexes of benzannulated pincer-type diarylamido ligands are described. The ligands all contain tricyclic phenanthridine (3,4-benzoquinoline) rings as donor arms, which were elaborated into N∧N−∧O-coordinating β-enaminoketonato chelates via partial condensation with acetylacetone. The proligands are easily deprotonated, and metallation can be achieved under mild conditions using simple Pt(II) salts and Ag2O as a base. The resulting Pt(II) complexes exhibit strong metal-to-ligand charge-transfer absorptions in the region of ∼450–575 nm and are phosphorescent in solution at room temperature, emitting bright orange light (λmax ∼ 600 nm) with quantum yields of up to 16% and excited-state lifetimes on the order of ∼20 μs, representing significant improvements to these photophysical properties compared with many previously reported N∧N∧O or N∧N∧N-ligated systems. Computational modelling reveals that the lowest-lying triplet state is populated efficiently thanks to strong coupling between singlet and triplet excited state manifolds, as in cyclometallated compounds of Pt(II). Substituents (CH3, tBu, or CF3) in the 2-position of the phenanthridinyl unit are found to have little influence on the optical properties, but the emission is severely quenched when a methyl substituent is introduced ortho to the coordinating nitrogen. Molecular distortions in the excited state are shown to be primarily responsible for the quenching in this complex.
Installation of aryl ligands via intramolecular cyclometalation of aryl C–H bonds by Pt(II), however, can require harsh reaction conditions.20 In comparison, deprotonation of N–H or O–H units and binding to Pt(II) is typically much more facile. Pt(II) complexes of monoanionic, all-heteroatom coordinating tridentate ligands have accordingly been reported, including N∧N∧N scaffolds derived from deprotonated isoindolates21 or diarylamido units,22,23 and N∧N∧O architectures based on 6-(ortho-phenoxy)bipyridines24,25 and related Schiff-base pyridine-imine and pyridine-hydrazone phenolates.26 The photophysical properties of these exemplars, however, often pale compared to those of their cyclometallated cousins, with smaller phosphorescence quantum yields and shorter phosphorescence lifetimes.
We have been interested in incorporating benzannulated N-heterocycles into multidentate scaffolds in order to delineate design principles for tuning photophysical properties of transition metal complexes.27,28 Our work to date has focused on phenanthridines (3,4-benzoquinolines). 2,4-Functionalized phenanthridines amenable for elaboration into multidentate scaffolds can be readily prepared via one-pot Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling/condensation reactions of 2-formylphenylboronic acids and a substituted aniline.29 Here, we targeted (N∧N∧O)Pt(II) complexes of simple β-enaminoketonato architectures30 bearing phenanthridinyl donor arms. Using ligands that are simple to prepare, complexation to Pt(II) can be achieved under similarly mild conditions. The complexes display quite bright orange emission at room temperature, with significantly improved quantum yields compared to those of related N∧N∧O-ligated systems24–26 and longer lifetimes compared to leading N∧N∧N-stabilized congeners.21 Structure–property correlations indicate that substituents in the phenanthridinyl ligand impact molecular rigidity rather than ligand electronics, confirmed by density functional theory (DFT) modelling of the lowest lying triplet excited states.
CH resonance of the phenanthridinyl ligand arm observed by 1H NMR [δ(N
CH): L1, 9.29 ppm; 1, 10.04 ppm]. Similarly, the 1H resonance of the methyl substituent at this same carbon in 2 also shifts to a higher frequency [δ(N
C(CH3)): L2, 3.05 ppm; 2, 3.53 ppm]. This characteristic shift of the N
CH1H resonance, and in the case of 2 the N
C(CH3), upon coordination to a Lewis acidic metal ion is also diagnostic in other square-planar Pt(II) complexes supported by phenanthridine-based ligand frameworks.22,23,31,32 Observation of coupling between the N
CH and spin-active 195Pt (3JPtH = 40 Hz in 1) further supports the binding of the phenanthridinyl donor to the metal centre. High resolution mass spectra (HRMS) of 1 and 2 are consistent with the proposed molecular formulae.
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| Scheme 1 Synthesis of (a) proligands L1–L4 and (b) Pt complexes 1–4 with yields in parentheses. The IUPAC numbering system for phenanthridines is illustrated in italics for the proligands. | ||
The solid-state structures of three of the Pt(II) complexes were established using single-crystal X-ray diffraction (Fig. 1; the structure of 3 has been previously reported31). In each complex, the Pt(II) ion is arranged in a pseudo-square planar coordination environment with the chloride ligand trans to the amido nitrogen donor, and the fused tricyclic phenanthridinyl unit more or less coplanar with the square coordination plane of Pt(II). Of the series, 2 exhibits a significant distortion as revealed by the angles of 19.5° (θ: Cl2–Pt2–N3–C21) and 30.6° (θ: Cl1–Pt1–N1–C1; two molecules are present in the asymmetric unit) between the phenanthridinyl and metal coordination planes due to the increased steric congestion arising from the methyl substituent at the N
C carbon of the heterocyclic donor arm. Accordingly, the calculated τδ value33 for 2 is more distorted from an ideal square-planar coordination environment compared with 1, 3 and 4 (τδ for 2: 0.16; 1: 0.03; 3: 0.03; 4: 0.02). Moreover, the N2–Pt1–Cl1/N4–Pt2–Cl2 angles are smaller in 2 [168.24(10)° and 172.48(9)°, respectively, for the two molecules in the asymmetric unit] compared with 1 [177.45(17)°], 3 [176.70(11)°]31 or 4 [177.97(18)°]. These distortions in the ground state of 2 have implications for its photophysics (vide infra). The four proligands present NMR and IR spectra consistent with the keto-enamine tautomer predominating in solution.31 In the Pt(II) complexes, the C–O distance is still quite short but does elongate slightly compared to in the proligand (C17–O1 1.278–1.297 Å, cf. 1.244(3) in tBuLH31), while the C15–N2 distance contracts (1.322–1.334 Å, cf. 1.363(3) in tBuLH31). This implies at least some C–O–Pt/C
N–Pt character. Indeed, the Pt1–N2 distances (1.998–1.987 Å) are not significantly different from unambiguous Pt–Nimine distances trans to chloro ligands reported for square-planar Pt(II) complexes with closely related coordination environments.26
N sub-unit hosting the majority of the orbital density for its LUMO. The results, summarized in Table 1, have been used to estimate experimental HOMO–LUMO gaps.
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| Fig. 2 Cyclic voltammograms (solid lines; 100 mV s−1) and differential pulse voltammograms (dashed lines) of 1–4 in CH2Cl2 containing 0.1 M [nBu4N][PF6] at 295 K. | ||
| Compound |
E
1/2 a/V |
E
HOMO/LUMO b/eV |
ΔEHOMO–LUMO/eV |
E
g c |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| a vs. FcH0/+ in CH2Cl2 at scan rates of 100 mV s−1. b Estimated using eqn (1) and (2) (see ESI†). c Estimated using eqn (3) for L1–4, and eqn (4) for 1–4 (see ESI†). | ||||
| L1 | −2.50, 0.64 | −5.44/−2.30 | 3.14 | 3.22 |
| L2 | −2.63, 0.53 | −5.33/−2.17 | 3.16 | 3.22 |
| L3 | −2.53, 0.66 | −5.46/−2.27 | 3.19 | 3.24 |
| L4 | −2.30, 0.82 | −5.62/−2.50 | 3.12 | 3.20 |
| 1 | −1.95, 0.72 | −5.52/−2.85 | 2.67 | 2.68 |
| 2 | −2.05, 0.71 | −5.51/−2.75 | 2.76 | 2.74 |
| 3 | −1.96, 0.71 | −5.51/−2.84 | 2.67 | 2.70 |
| 4 | −1.74, 0.85 | −5.65/−3.06 | 2.59 | 2.61 |
A general destabilization of the HOMO energies of the ligands is expected on going from electron-withdrawing (CF3) to electron-releasing (CH3, tBu) substitution in the 2-position of the phenanthridinyl unit. A further destabilization results from introducing an electron-releasing CH3 substituent into the 6-position as in L2 (EHOMO/eV: L2 > L3 ≈ L1 > L4). Consequently, oxidation events occur at lower potentials for L1–L3, with the most negative oxidation potential for L2 and most positive oxidation potential observed for L4. A similar trend can be discerned in the irreversible cathodic events associated with reduction of the ligands, with L2 reduced at the most negative potential. This implies that the LUMO energies of the proligands are in the order ELUMO/eV: L2 > L3 ≈ L1 > L4. Overall, however, the HOMO–LUMO gaps estimated from electrochemistry (ΔEHOMO–LUMO) are quite similar for L1–L4, indicating that substitution induces similar perturbations to the two frontier molecular orbitals of the ligands. Consistent with this, the UV-Vis spectra of the four proligands are quite similar, except for L3 which presents a broader and slightly blue-shifted λmax (Fig. S3†).
Upon deprotonation and coordination to Lewis acidic Pt(II), a shift to more positive potentials is observed for both the oxidation and reduction potentials. While it might be expected that the bigger change to the character of the HOMOs of 1–4 through introduction of metal/chloride character would more significantly impact oxidation than reduction involving the largely phenanthridine-localized LUMO, the observed shifts suggest a larger stabilization of the LUMO energies (ΔELUMO/meV: L1vs. 1, −550; L2vs. 2, −580; L3vs. 3, −570; L4vs. 4, −560; ΔEHOMO/meV: L1vs. 1, −180; L2vs. 2, −190; L3vs. 3, −50; L4vs. 4, −30). For the series, the electrochemically estimated HOMO energies of 1–3 are comparable, while the HOMO of 4 is further stabilized (ΔEstab ∼ 140 meV vs. 1). In sharp contrast, the LUMO energies mirror the trend observed for the proligands: ELUMO/eV: 2 > 3 ≈ 1 > 4, with a larger stabilization energy of 210 meV in 4 relative to 1. Electronic perturbations by the substituent in the frontier molecular orbital energies are evidently larger for the LUMO than the HOMO in the complexes. We return to these points later.
000 M−1 cm−1; λ ∼ 350 nm, ε > 11
000 M−1 cm−1), ascribable to ligand-based excitations. Comparison with analogous Pt(II) chloride complexes of monoanionic, pincer-type N-8-quinolinyl-4-aminophenanthridines22,23,32 favours a mixed [M+L]LCT assignment for the lowest energy manifold. Such Namido–Pt–Cl systems can be compartmentalized in terms of the character of the donor (nCl + dPt + nNamido) and acceptor (largely phenanthridine-based π* orbitals, with significant contribution from the HC
N sub-unit) molecular fragments.
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| Fig. 3 (a) UV-Vis absorption spectra of 1–4 in CH2Cl2 at 295 K. (b) UV-Vis absorption spectra of 4 in a variety of solvents illustrating the solvatochromism of the lowest energy band. | ||
UV-Vis absorption spectra collected for 4 in a range of solvents support the CT assignment (Fig. 3b). The lowest energy absorption exhibits negative solvatochromism, suggesting stabilization of the ground-state relative to the excited state of interest with increasing solvent polarity. Fitting the transition energies to Reichardt's ETN function36 leads to a relatively weak correlation (R2 = 0.77; Fig. S4†), which improves when protic and aprotic solvents are treated separately (R2 = 0.96, 0.93) indicating that specific solute–solvent interactions need to be taken into account. Using Catalan's four parameter solvent scale37 to separate contributions of specific solute–solvent interactions (e.g., solvent acidity/basicity) from non-specific interactions (solvent polarizability/dipolarity) produces a much better correlation between calculated and experimental transition energies (Fig. S5†). Given solubility constraints on the range of solvents employed, we attribute the hypsochromic shift of λmax in increasingly polar solvents with the most confidence to solvent dipolarity (i.e., solute–solvent dipole interactions) and solvent acidity (i.e., hydrogen bonding; Tables S1 and S2†). In particular, the large coefficient and positive sign obtained from fitting the solvent dipolarity indicate preferential ground-state stabilization.36 Increasing solvent dipolarity would be expected to stabilize the larger dipole moment typically associated with an excited state of CT character. However, the [M+L]LCT character of 1–4 induces an excited state dipole moment (μe) which is not expected to orient in the same direction as the ground state dipole moment (μg). The Franck–Condon principle necessitates the solvent to be in a ‘frozen’ state; that is, the solvent remains in its ground-state equilibrium orientation around the chromophore. This leads to ‘orientational strain’ on the solvent contributing to the apparent hypsochromic shift in the CT excitation energies with increasing solvent polarity.38 In contrast, ground state stabilization by solvent acidity is made possible by hydrogen bonding to atom(s) contributing to the HOMO, likely through the chloride. Indeed, incorporation of hydrogen-bonding solvents (e.g., CHCl3) with close contacts to the chloride and oxygen of the ligand is observed in the solid-state structure of 2 (Fig. S6†).
As with related Pt(II) complexes chelated by monanionic, tridentate N∧N∧O Schiff-base ligands,26 the novel Pt(II) complexes presented here emit in the orange region of the visible spectrum (λmax ∼ 600 nm; Fig. 4). Each of complexes 1, 3 and 4 are brightly emissive, with quantum yields up to 16% in deoxygenated dichloromethane at room temperature (Table 2), superior to those of the archetypal MLCT emitter [Ru(bpy)3]2+ for example,39 and one to two orders of magnitude larger than those observed for Pt(II) complexes of closely related phenanthridine-based diarylamido ligands.23 In contrast, the 2,6-dimethyl substituted 2 is only very weakly emissive at room temperature, too weak to reliably record a quantum yield or lifetime. Amongst the other three, complex 4 emits with (marginally) the narrowest band structure (FWHM = 2460 cm−1 compared to 2730 cm−1 for 3) and the highest quantum yield. These values far exceed those reported for (N∧N∧O)PtCl complexes based on dipyridylphenolato frameworks, which emit at λem 593–606 nm, with Φ ∼ 1–4% in the solid-state,25 and those for Pt(II) emitters with Schiff-base ligand frameworks (λem 686–735 nm; Φ = 0.5–4.6% in fluid solution for quinoline-based derivatives; λem 580–636 nm for hydrazone derived analogs, with Φ reaching 11% for acetylide derivatives).26 The luminescence of 1, 3 and 4 follows mono-exponential decay kinetics, with a lifetime of around 22 μs in each. Values in the microsecond range are typical of phosphorescence from the triplet state in cyclometallated Pt(II) complexes, although most examples tend to be somewhat shorter-lived, usually <10 μs. Some insight into the longer lifetimes can be gleaned by estimating the radiative kr and non-radiative ∑knr rate constants from the quantum yields and lifetimes (Table 2). The former are around an order of magnitude lower than found for the brightest Pt(II) emitters (though the brightest tend to be green emitters), but not dissimilar to values for [Pt(dqpy)Cl]+, for example (dqpy = 1,3-di(8-quinolyl)pyridine).40 The ∑knr values, meanwhile, are of a magnitude fairly typical for Pt(II) emitters with tridentate ligands.
| Absorption λmax/nm (ε/M−1 cm−1)a | Emission λmax b/nm |
Φ
lum c/10−2 |
τ /μs |
k
SQQ e/108 M−1 s−1 |
/108 M−1 s−1 |
k
r f/103 s−1 |
∑knr f/103 s−1 |
Emission 77 Kg | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| λ max/nm | τ/μs | |||||||||
a In CH2Cl2 at 295 K.
b In deoxygenated CH2Cl2 at 295 K.
c Measured using [Ru(bpy)3]Cl2 (aq) as the standard.
d Values in parenthesis refer to air-equilibrated solution.
e Self-quenching rate constant estimated from concentration dependence of lifetime.
f Radiative kr and non-radiative ∑knr rate constants calculated assuming that the emitting state is formed with unit efficiency, under which conditions kr = Φ/τ and ∑knr = (1 − Φ)/τ.
g In diethyl ether/isopentane/ethanol (2 : 2 : 1 v/v).
h The emission intensity of complex 2 is too weak to determine the lifetime or a reliable Φlum.
|
||||||||||
| 1 | 261 (27 800), 354 (17 200), 463 (6030) |
604 | 9.1 | 23 [0.42] | 1.5 | 11 | 4.0 | 40 | 573, 620, 682sh | 64 |
| 2 | 261 (28 736), 343 (11 241), 453 (5424) |
610 | —h | — | — | — | — | — | 587, 640, 700sh | 36 |
| 3 | 258 (31 800), 354 (16 500), 459 (5080) |
608 | 6.8 | 22 [0.41] | 2.0 | 11 | 3.1 | 42 | 573, 620, 682sh | 61 |
| 4 | 265 (24 600), 360 (16 100), 475 (5980) |
608 | 16 | 24 [0.48] | 1.1 | 9.3 | 6.7 | 35 | 579, 626, 694sh | 52 |
Given the long lifetimes in fluid solution, it is not surprising to find that the emission is strongly quenched by dissolved molecular oxygen, with bimolecular quenching constants of the order of 109 M−1 s−1 at room temperature. A modest degree of self-quenching is also observed in concentrated solutions, though the self-quenching constants of 1 − 2 × 108 M−1 s−1 are much lower than for systems such as Pt(N∧C∧N-dpyb)Cl and derivatives {dpyb = 1,3-di(2-pyridyl)benzene}.18 Moreover, there is no evidence of excimer emission to lower energy at elevated concentrations, unlike many of the latter group.
To better understand the trends in absorption, emission and electrochemistry, density functional theory (DFT) modelling of 1–4 was performed. Molecular orbital energies from ground-state optimized geometries (Fig. 5 and Tables S5–S8†) corroborate the trends in the HOMO–LUMO gaps gleaned from electrochemistry and electronic absorption spectroscopy (Fig. S7†). In particular, the HOMO energies are slightly stabilized upon deprotonation/metal coordination and mirror the ordering discussed above. In each case, the HOMO has significant contributions from platinum (∼20%), the N∧O donor chelate (∼45%) and the chloride (∼10%), with Pt–Namido/O/Cl π-antibonding character evident in the MO isosurfaces. The LUMO, on the other hand, is largely comprised of the phenanthridinyl π* manifold, with significant contribution from the C
N fragment (1 28, 2 31, 3 29, 4 28%), minor delocalization into the N∧O chelate (∼15%) and negligible metal (2%) and halide (0%) contributions. As noted above, comparing the electrochemical data of L1–L4 and 1–4 reveals a more pronounced shift to the potentials associated with reductions of 1–4vs. L1–L4 compared to their respective oxidations. The localization of the LUMO at the C
N sub-unit apparently amplifies the stabilizing effect of coordination to Pt(II) on the vacant, low-lying orbitals.
![]() | ||
| Fig. 5 Molecular orbital energy level diagrams, HOMO–LUMO gaps and selected isosurfaces (isovalue = 0.04) for 1–4. | ||
The nature of the frontier orbitals is in line with previously studied transition metal complexes supported by ligand frameworks containing phenanthridinyl moieties, with mixed-character (metal + nN) HOMO and πphen* LUMO frontier orbitals.41,42 It is notable that in the HOMOs, there is no orbital density at the 2-position of the phenanthridinyl ring. The slight perturbation in the HOMO energies thus appears to originate from the weak inductive effect of the substituent, through the orbital density at the 1- and 3-positions. The CH3 substituent at the 6-position did not have any notable effect on the energy of the HOMO of 2 as there is no significant orbital density at the attached carbon or the adjacent nitrogen. In comparison, the LUMOs present orbital density at carbon atoms in both the 6- (C
N) and 2-positions; thus, the CF3 substituent in 4 stabilizes the vacant MO and enhances the electron-accepting character of the LUMO, while the LUMO of 2 is destabilized compared to 1 as a result of hyperconjugation of the CH3 σC–H with the phenanthridinyl π*HC
N orbital.
TDDFT simulations were also carried out. Given the presence of the third-row transition metal ion, we first investigated the impact of spin–orbit coupling (SOC) on the calculated UV-Vis absorption spectra (Fig. S8†) of a representative complex (4). The scalar-only simulated TDDFT spectrum of 4 (Fig. S13†) shows only one particle-hole pair involved in the lowest energy manifold of HOMO → LUMO character (97%; Table S12†) consistent with a mixed (M+L)LCT assignment. A notable absence of transitions is observed in the valley region between the lowest energy (∼460 nm) and mid-energy (∼353 nm) absorption manifolds within the spin-only approximation. Inclusion of SOC (SOC-TDDFT) leads to an increase in the spectral intensity of this region. Previous computational modelling of the UV-Vis absorption spectra of Re(I) carbonyl complexes supported by 8-aminophenanthridines and 4-aminoquinolines indicated that SOC is necessary in accounting for weak, low-energy transitions in the 450–650 nm range of such complexes.43 In addition, a growing body of literature supports the necessity of SOC to properly model the absorption spectra of complexes containing heavy elements, providing a mechanism to account for the direct population of low-lying excited triplet states.43–46
SOC-TDDFT simulated spectra for all four complexes calculated using a polarizable continuum of CH2Cl2 are in excellent agreement with the experimental UV-Vis absorption spectra (Fig. S9–S12 and Tables S9–S12†). In general, our simulations suggest that two important transitions are responsible for the lowest energy manifold of the experimental UV-Vis spectra. For 1–3, one weaker, lower-energy (SOC4, fosc > 0.005) and a stronger, higher-energy transition (SOC7, fosc > 0.049) are prominent, while the weaker SOC4 gains intensity in 4 due to increased participation of S1 (1–3 < 11%, 4 ∼ 40%). Both transitions have largely S1 excited singlet state contributions, while T2 states dominate the excited triplet state. The S1 state is largely HOMO → LUMO; that is, (M+L)LCT, in character. The T2 excited state, on the other hand, has significant contribution from the HOMO−1 → LUMO transition, which comprises a similar (M+L)LCT character but with increased contribution from Pt (%Pt, HOMO−1: 1 32, 2 38, 3 34, 4 46) and reduced Cl (%Cl, HOMO−1: 1 0, 2 12, 3 0, 4 4) contribution. This would suggest that the lowest energy absorption manifold can be reasonably attributed to HOMO → LUMO transitions, which enables us to estimate the Eg from the λmax of this band. This also explains the excellent agreement between the experimental ΔEHOMO–LUMO from electrochemistry and Eg estimated by optical spectroscopy. Thus, the spectral shifts observed between the Pt(II) complexes can be largely attributed to the electronic perturbations identified in the frontier MOs. In either case, relaxation to the lowest-lying triplet state (T1) is expected prior to radiative decay.
The optimized geometries of the T1 state, in each case, show a general contraction of the Pt–Namido (Pt1–N2) and Pt–Cl bond distances (Table S4†). This is consistent with depopulation of an orbital (HOMO) with Pt–Namido/Pt–Cl antibonding character. The increase in bond order reflects the charge-transfer (CT) character of T1, as metal-centered (MC) states would be expected to result in longer metal–ligand bonds thanks to population of metal–ligand anti-bonding orbitals. Similar π-mixing between ligand π-orbitals and metal d-orbitals of appropriate symmetry has been observed in Fe(II) complexes of diarylamido ligands, but not for other metals.47 In the former, depopulation of a highly covalent HOMO with metal–Namido (dπ–pπ)* anti-bonding character is similarly thought to induce a metal–ligand bond contraction in the CT state, with consequences for CT/MC excited state ordering. In comparison, square planar Pt complexes of dithiolene ligands bearing protonated pyrazine units show diminished dπ–pπ hybridization compared to complexes of lighter elements such as Ni.48 Of the four complexes, 2 exhibits the most distortion both in its solid-state structure, and in its optimized ground-state and lowest-lying excited triplet state geometries. This is clear from the calculated τδ parameter (0.16) which indicates a distorted square planar geometry (Fig. 6). The anomalously weak emission from 2 can thus be attributed to competitive non-radiative decay pathways made possible by excited state distortions.49
Finally, for the brightest emitter (4), we probed the excited state dynamics (ESD) via the ESD module implemented in the ORCA software suite,50,51 using the optimized geometries of the ground-state (1GSeq) and lowest-lying triplet excited state (T1). We first estimated the rate of intersystem crossing (kISC) of the scalar-only S1 (the dominant transition in the visible region) and S7 (the dominant transition contributing to the band at 360 nm) states at the 1GS geometry to the lowest-lying excited triplet state at its equilibrium geometry (Table S13†). Rapid and efficient population of the triplet state is calculated with average kISC of 8.870 × 1012 s−1 (S1 → T1) and 1.020 × 1013 s−1 (S7 → T1). This suggests strong coupling between these states and the presumably emissive T1 state, consistent with the strong mixing between the singlet and triplet states through the influence of SOC evident in the UV-Vis absorption spectra, as discussed above. SOC-TDDFT simulations also predict strong mixing between S1 and T2, both of which contribute significantly to the predicted strong, low-energy absorptions in the calculated SOC-TDDFT spectrum (Fig. S12 and Table S12†), and both of which exhibit (M+L)LCT character. This suggests that T2 is also populated upon excitation, and likely undergoes rapid internal conversion to T1.
We also simulated the phosphorescence spectra and decay parameters for 4 (Table S14†). In general, the simulated spectra of 4 at room temperature (Fig. S14†) and 77 K (Fig. S15†) faithfully reproduce the respective experimental spectra, with errors of <0.2 eV. The vibrational progression observed experimentally at 77 K that appears as a low-energy shoulder at 295 K is reproduced in both calculated spectra, indicating the molecule retains rigidity in solution at 295 K with only minimal distortion, as shown by similar values for τδ for both 1GSeq and T1,eq. In contrast, the emission spectrum of 2 is broad and weak at 295 K, but resembles those of 1, 3 and 4 at 77 K (Fig. S16†). This implies that significant distortions occur at elevated temperature, in line with the weakness of the emission. Spin density maps reveal a similar (M+L)LCT character of the emissive triplet state of all four complexes (Fig. S17†).
441 reflections, 2739 independent (Rint = 0.0642), direct methods; absorption coeff. (μ = 8.954 mm−1), absorption correction semi-empirical from equivalents (SADABS); refinement (against Fo2) with SHELXTL V6.1, 220 parameters, 0 restraints, R1 = 0.0351 (I > 2σ) and wR2 = 0.0754 (all data), Goof = 1.121, residual electron density 1.745/−1.521 e Å−3.
; a = 11.0564(7) Å, b = 14.0350(9) Å, c = 16.4321(10) Å, α = 113.018(2)°, β = 99.705(2)°, γ = 100.551(2)°, V = 2224.4(2) Å3; Z = 4, ρcalcd = 1.951 g cm−3; crystal dimensions 0.35 × 0.14 × 0.06 mm; diffractometer Bruker D8 QUEST ECO CMOS; Mo Kα radiation, 150(2) K, 2θmax = 2.550 to 30.591°; 61
734 reflections, 13
610 independent (Rint = 0.0468), direct methods; absorption coeff. (μ = 6.804 mm−1), absorption correction semi-empirical from equivalents (SADABS); refinement (against Fo2) with SHELXTL V6.1, 531 parameters, 0 restraints, R1 = 0.0335 (I > 2σ) and wR2 = 0.652 (all data), Goof = 1.044, residual electron density 1.784/−1.569 e Å−3.
565 reflections, 3880 independent (Rint = 0.0828), direct methods; absorption coeff (μ = 8.543 mm−1), absorption correction semi-empirical from equivalents (SADABS); refinement (against Fo2) with SHELXTL V6.1, 231 parameters, 0 restraints, R1 = 0.0436 (I > 2σ) and wR2 = 0.0844 (all data), Goof = 1.115, residual electron density 2.469/−2.433 e Å−3.
Single point calculations were conducted using the same dispersion corrected PBE0 functional and inclusion of implicit solvation using the solvation model based on density (SMD,64 solvent = CH2Cl2) on gas-phase optimized geometries. However, to best account for scalar relativistic effects, we employed the zeroth order approximation (ZORA65), ZORA-optimized all-electron relativistic (ZORA-def2-TZVP63 on H, C, N, O, F, and Cl; SARC-ZORA-TZVP on Pt) and the appropriate auxiliary basis sets (SARC/J66,67). We used the same SCF convergence criteria and COS-X grid for all single points (tightscf; intaccx 4.34, 4.34, 4.67; gridx 2,2,2), while the DFT integration grids were increased to grid6 and finalgrid7. We also increased the grid around Pt (specialgridintacc 9). Time-dependent DFT (TDDFT) was used to predict the first 50 Sn,FC ← 1GSeq and Tn,FC ← 1GSeq excitations (FC implies electronic excitations within the Franck–Condon approximation) to simulate the UV-Vis spectra of the complexes without spin–orbit correction. In addition, we also predicted the extent of SOC effects by allowing mixing of Sn and Tn states as implemented in ORCA.
The excited-state dynamics of 4 were probed using the ESD module implemented in ORCA.50,51 The phosphorescence spectrum was simulated and phosphorescence rate constants (kphos, and intersystem crossing rate (kISC) were calculated. The three substates (MS = −1, 0, +1) of the lowest excited triplet state were considered in estimating kphos and kISC at 298 K and 77 K. For kISC, we considered the ground state optimized geometry as the geometry of the populated excited singlet states initially populated upon light excitation. This was performed for both S1(1GSeq) and S7(1GSeq), as these have the strongest oscillator strengths in the absorbance bands at 475 and 360 nm, respectively. The final geometry is of the lowest-lying excited triplet state. For the kphos, initial and final geometries are of the lowest-lying excited triplet state and ground state, respectively.
Luminescence lifetimes of the complexes in air-equilibrated solutions were measured by time-correlated single-photon counting, following excitation at 405 nm with a pulsed-diode laser. The emitted light was detected at 90° using a Peltier-cooled R928 PMT after passage through a monochromator. The estimated uncertainty in the quoted lifetimes is ±10% or better. Lifetimes in deoxygenated solution and at 77 K were measured following excitation with a microsecond-pulsed xenon lamp and detection using the same PMT operating in multichannel scaling mode. For all measurements, the decays were much longer than the instrument response and data were analyzed by tail fitting to the following equation (rather than by deconvolution of the response function):
I(t) = I(0) exp(−kt) + c |
Footnote |
| † Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available: Additional UV-Vis absorption and emission spectra; computational data tables; multi-nuclear NMR spectra of all new compounds; crystallographic information files containing all X-ray data. CCDC 2100576–2100578. For ESI and crystallographic data in CIF or other electronic format see DOI: 10.1039/d1qi01120k |
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