Long-Lived Trimetallic Complexes of Fe(II), Ru(II), and Os(II) Based on a Heteroditopic Bipyridine-Terpyridine Bridge: Synthesis, Photophysics, and Electronic Energy Transfer

Inorg Chem. 2019 Aug 5;58(15):10065-10077. doi: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.9b01217. Epub 2019 Jul 17.

Abstract

Synthesis, characterization, and investigation of photophysical and redox behaviors of a new class of homo- and heterotrimetallic complexes of composition [(bpy/phen)2Ru(dipy-Hbzim-tpy)M(tpy-Hbzim-dipy)Ru(bpy/phen)2]6+ (M = FeII, RuII, and OsII) derived from a conjugated heteroditopic bipyridine-terpyridine bridge were carried out in this work. Trimetallic RuZnRu complexes of composition [(bpy/phen)2Ru(dipy-Hbzim-tpy)Zn(tpy-Hbzim-dipy)Ru(bpy/phen)2]6+ were also synthesized in situ as their photophysical properties are of particular interest in demonstrating the absorption and emission spectra of the complexes in the presence of a metal (Zn2+) that has neither metal-to-ligand charge transfer (MLCT) nor metal-centered (3MC) states. Complexes display intense absorption bands spanning almost the entire UV and visible region. The complexes also exhibit rich electrochemical behaviors with a number of metal-centered reversible oxidation and ligand-centered reduction waves. All complexes are luminescent at room temperature, and time-resolved emission spectral studies indicate that peripheral RuII-centered emissive 3MLCT states are quantitatively quenched, by intramolecular energy transfer to the low lying 3MLCT (for central Ru and Os) or 3MC states of the FeII center (nonluminescent). Interestingly, Fe(II) does not adversely deteriorate the photophysics of the RuFeRu assembly. Thus, multicomponent complexes in the present work can serve as well-organized light-harvesting antennas as the light absorbed by multiple chromophoric subunits is efficiently channeled to the distinct component having the lowest-energy excited state.