Highly fluorescent platinum(II) organometallic complexes of perylene and perylene monoimide, with Pt σ-bonded directly to the perylene core

Inorg Chem. 2010 Oct 18;49(20):9169-77. doi: 10.1021/ic1003319.

Abstract

3-Bromoperylene (BrPer) or N-(2,5-di-tert-butylphenyl)-9-bromo-perylene-3,4-dicarboximide (BrPMI) react with [Pt(PEt(3))(4)] to yield trans-[PtR(PEt(3))(2)Br] (R = Per, 1a; R = PMI, 1b). Neutral and cationic perylenyl complexes containing a Pt(PEt(3))X group have been prepared from 1a,b by substitution of the Br ligand by a variety of other ligands (NCS, CN, NO(3), CN(t)Bu, PyMe). The X-ray structures of trans-[PtR(PEt(3))(2)X] (R = Per, X = NCS (2a); R = PMI, X = NO(3) (4b); R = Per, X = CN(t)Bu (5a)) show that the perylenyl fragment remains nearly planar and is arranged almost orthogonal to the coordination plane: The three molecules appear as individual entities in the solid state, with no π-π stacking of perylenyl rings. Each platinum complex exhibits fluorescence associated to the perylene or PMI fragments with emission quantum yields, in solution at room temperature, in the range 0.30-0.80 and emission lifetimes ∼4 ns, but with significantly different emission maxima, by influence of the X ligands on Pt. The similarity of the overall luminescence spectra of these metalated complexes with the perylene or PMI strongly suggests a perylene-dominated intraligand π-π*emissive state, metal-perturbed by interaction of the platinum fragment mostly via polarization of the Ar-Pt bond.