Tetrahedral zinc complexes with liquid crystalline and luminescent properties: interplay between nonconventional molecular shapes and supramolecular mesomorphic order

J Am Chem Soc. 2007 Sep 19;129(37):11608-18. doi: 10.1021/ja073639c. Epub 2007 Aug 22.

Abstract

Novel metallomesogens with luminescent properties and liquid crystalline behavior at room temperature have been achieved by the preparation of zinc complexes with polycatenar pyrazole and bis(pyrazolyl)methane ligands. Their molecular structures do not have a conventional shape in that they are far from the typical rod-like and flat disc-like geometries of common liquid crystals. They consist of a nonplanar nucleus due to the methylene spacer and/or the coordination to the tetrahedral center, as confirmed by single crystal analysis of the cores. The different numbers and positions of side chains in the pyrazole ligand enabled us to access lamellar and columnar mesophases and, of particular interest, to obtain columnar arrangements at room temperature. Supramolecular models for the organization of the molecules in the mesophases are proposed on the basis of the small-angle XRD diffractograms. The zinc complexes display luminescence in the near UV-blue region with large Stokes shifts. An interplay between non-conventional molecular shapes (due to the tetrahedral core) and the supramolecular mesomorphic order (due to the ligand design) led to materials that interestingly embody two rather opposite properties, a columnar self-organizational ability and luminescence with weak intermolecular interactions.