Terpyridine–Thiophene–Triphenylamine Conjugated Ligand Design Enabling Green-Colored, Multistate Electrochromic Fe(II) Metallopolymers
Abstract
Achieving diverse and precisely controlled color outputs remains a key challenge for electrochromic materials, particularly for FeII terpyridine-based metallopolymers, which are typically limited to purple hues due to the fixed energy of FeII–terpyridine metal-to-ligand charge-transfer transitions. Here, a donor–π–acceptor terpyridine ligand incorporating a thiophene–triphenylamine (Tpy–Th–TPA) unit was employed to construct an Fe-based electrochromic metallopolymer. The [FeII(TpyThTPA)2]2+ monomer complex exhibits an uncommon green color arising from a red-shifted MLCT band combined with an intraligand charge-transfer transition band. Oxidative electropolymerization of this complex enables the direct formation of an electroactive metallopolymer film on ITO substrates. Owing to well-separated ligand- and metal-centered redox processes, the resulting FeII metallopolymer film displays three distinct and reversibly addressable electrochromic states, undergoing sequential color changes from green to blue and yellow-green. The film exhibits reversible switching, reasonable response times (tc = 2.3 s, and tb =1.9 s), a coloration efficiency of 291.6 cm2 C–1, and good cycling stability, demonstrating that rational donor–π–acceptor ligand design is an effective strategy for tailoring the optical properties of Fe metallopolymers and achieving multistate electrochromism.
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