Nanostructuring Iridium Complexes into Crystalline Phosphorescent Nanoparticles: Structural Characterization, Photophysics, and Biological Applications

ACS Appl Bio Mater. 2019 Oct 21;2(10):4594-4603. doi: 10.1021/acsabm.9b00681. Epub 2019 Sep 13.

Abstract

One of the key challenges in materials science is to control the properties of a material by directing its supramolecular arrangement. Here we show that iridium complexes, such as FIrpic, Ir-PPY, and Ir-MDQ, can be organized into crystalline and phosphorescent nanoparticles through the nanoprecipitation method, which allows thorough modification of their functional properties. Moreover, we found that it is possible to combine different iridium complexes into a single multicomponent nanostructure, thus creating nanoparticles whose photonic properties derive from the close spatial proximity of the electronic excited states of the different Ir complexes. The morphology of all nanoparticles was fully characterized by microscopic and spectroscopic techniques, and their ordered arrangement was assessed by X-ray diffraction (XRD) and high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (TEM) measurements. We demonstrate that the nanostructuring of the complexes influences their optical and redox properties-by promoting a fine-tuning of emission, photoluminescence quantum yield, excited state lifetime, HOMO/LUMO energy levels, and energy-transfer processes-as well as their interaction with living cells. Investigations on glioblastoma U-251 MG cells demonstrate that nanostructuring represents an effective tool to regulate the efficiency of cell loading, cell viability, colocalization, and penetration in 3D spheroids.

Keywords: 3D spheroids; iridium complexes; multicomponent nanoparticles; nanoprecipitation; phosophorescent nanoparticles.