A nearly perfect icosahedral Ir@Au12 superatom with superior photoluminescence obtained by ligand engineering†
Abstract
Heterometal doping and the introduction of surface ligands drastically alter the optical and photophysical properties of gold-based superatoms by modulating their electronic structures and the excited state dynamics. In this study, we investigate how the structures and the optical properties of an Ir@Au12 superatom capped by a diphosphine ligand, bis[benzo[b]phosphindole]ethane (bbpe), in which the rotation of the phenyl groups is prohibited, differ from those capped by the conventional diphosphine ligands, such as 1,2-bis(diphenylphosphino)ethane (dppe) and bis(diphenylphosphino)methane (dppm). The co-reduction of Ir(III)- and Au(I)-precursors under mild reaction conditions yielded homoleptically capped [IrAu12(bbpe)6]3+ clusters (IrAu12-b) as the primary product. Single crystal X-ray diffraction analysis of IrAu12-b revealed the formation of a nearly perfect icosahedral Ir@Au12 superatomic core, in which the central Ir atom is equidistant from each vertex Au atom. The energy gap between occupied 1P and unoccupied 1D superatomic orbitals of IrAu12-b was larger than that of its dppm-capped counterpart, [IrAu12(dppm)6]3+ as evidenced by a blue shift (140 nm) of the photoluminescence (PL) wavelength and DFT calculations. IrAu12-b exhibited PL at 596 nm with a high quantum yield of 87% in deaerated CH2Cl2 due to the expanded 1P–1D energy gap and the restricted molecular motions of the bbpe ligands.
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