146 research outputs found

    In situ laser irradiation setup for a Bruker three-circle goniometer

    Get PDF
    A new design of a setup for in situ laser irradiation of single crystals during an X-ray diffraction experiment is presented. The system is designed for use with a Bruker three-circle goniometer in combination with a Helix ultra-low-temperature cryostat and consists of a laser mount and a set of three adjustable mirrors. The main advantages of the presented system include a stationary laser mount, the ability to irradiate a sample inside the Be nozzle and no impediments to the goniometer movements

    Platinum(IV) Complexes with Tridentate, NNC-Coordinating Ligands: Synthesis, Structures, and Luminescence

    Get PDF
    Platinum(II) complexes of NNC-cyclometalating ligands based on 6-phenyl-2,2′-bipyridine (HL1) have been widely investigated for their luminescence properties. We describe how PtL1Cl and five analogues with differently substituted aryl rings, PtL2–6Cl, can be oxidized with chlorine and/or iodobenzene dichloride to generate Pt(IV) compounds of the form Pt(NNC-Ln)Cl3 (n = 1–6). The molecular structures of several of them have been determined by X-ray diffraction. These PtLnCl3 compounds react with 2-arylpyridines to give a new class of Pt(IV) complex of the form [Pt(NNC)(NC)Cl]+. Elevated temperatures are required, and the reaction is accompanied by competitive reduction processes and generation of side-products; however, four examples of such complexes have been isolated and their molecular structures determined. Reaction of PtL1Cl3 with HL1 similarly generates [Pt(NNC-L1)2]2+, which we believe to be the first example of a bis-tridentate Pt(IV) complex. The lowest-energy bands in the UV–vis absorption spectra of all the PtLnCl3 compounds are displaced to higher energy relative to the Pt(II) precursors, but they red-shift with the electron richness of the aryl ring, consistent with predominantly 1[πAr → π*NN] character to the pertinent excited state. A similar trend is observed for the [Pt(NNC)(NC)Cl]+ complexes. They display phosphorescence in solution at room temperature, centered around 500 nm for [PtL1(ppy)Cl]+ and [Pt(L1)2]2+, and 550 nm for methoxy-substituted derivatives. The lifetimes are in the microsecond range, rising to hundreds of microseconds at 77 K, consistent with triplet excited states of primarily 3[πAr → π*NN] character with relatively little participation of the metal

    Luminescent bis-tridentate iridium(III) complexes: Overcoming the undesirable reactivity of trans-disposed metallated rings using –N^N^N–coordinating bis(1,2,4-triazolyl)pyridine ligands

    Get PDF
    Nine new iridium(III) complexes featuring two tridentate ligands have been synthesised of the form Ir(N^C^N)(–N^N^N–), where N^C^N represents a cyclometallating ligand based on 1,3-di(2-pyridyl)benzene and –N^N^N– is a doubly deprotonated bis(1,2,4-triazolyl)pyridine. Three examples of each ligand have been used, with different substituents in the central aryl ring of the former and para-substituted aryl groups in the 5-positions of the triazole rings of the latter. Two of the complexes have been structurally characterised in the solid-state by X-ray diffraction, confirming the mutually orthogonal arrangement of the two ligands. Unlike related tris-cyclometallated complexes of the type Ir(N^C^N)(C^N^C), which are unstable with respect to photoactivated cleavage of the trans-disposed Ir–C bonds, the new complexes show no evidence of instability. They are phosphorescent in the green region of the spectrum with lifetimes around 200 ns and quantum yields up to 3%, apparently limited by non-radiative decay processes in particular. Although there is some variation in performance with substitution pattern, the only discernible trend is that complexes of the 4-methoxy-substituted N^C^N ligand are the better emitters. Three examples of related complexes of the form Ir(N^C^N)(N^N–)Cl – incorporating a bidentate 1,2,4-triazolylpyridine – have also been prepared. They show no room-temperature emission but the properties at 77 K are similar to those of the bis-tridentate systems

    Synthesis, stereocontrol and structural studies of highly luminescent chiral tris-amidepyridyl-triazacyclononane lanthanide complexes

    Get PDF
    The configuration of the remote amide chiral moiety determines the helicity of the metal complex in Ln(III) complexes of nonadentate N6O3 ligands based on triazacyclononane. Solution NMR studies revealed the presence of a dominant isomer whose proportion varies from 9 : 1 to 4 : 1 from Ce to Yb and X-ray crystallographic studies at 120 K of the Yb and two enantiomeric Eu complexes confirmed the configuration as S-Δ-λ in the major isomer. Global minimisation methods allowed magnetic susceptibility and electronic relaxation times of the lanthanide ions to be estimated by analysis of variable field longitudinal relaxation rate (R1) data sets. A set of four europium complexes, containing different para-substituted pyridinyl-aryl groups, exist as one major isomer (15 : 1), and absorb light strongly via an ICT transition in the range 320 to 355 nm (ε = 55 to 65 000 M−1 cm−1). The two examples absorbing light at 332 nm, possess overall emission quantum yields of 35 and 37% in aerated water, making these systems as bright as any Eu complex in solution

    Gelation by histidine-derived ureas

    Get PDF
    A series of l-histidine-derived monoureas are described which exhibit versatile organogelation peroperties when the substituent directly attached to the urea is an aliphatic group. Arylureas exhibit a tendency to bind chloride anion

    Selective gelation of N-(4-pyridyl)nicotinamide by copper(II) salts

    Get PDF
    We report the selective gelation properties of the copper(II) complexes of N-(4-pyridyl)nicotinamide (4PNA). The morphology of the xerogels was examined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM). The correlation between the X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) pattern of the xerogels and the single crystal structure of the copper(II) acetate complex suggests that the single crystal X-ray data represent a good structural model for the gel fibers, and that gelation arises from the presence of a 1D hydrogen-bonded chain between gelator amide groups and coordinated anions, while the presence of strongly bound water in non-gelator systems results in the formation of more extensively hydrogen-bonded crystalline networks. The selective gelation of all the copper(II) salts compared to the other metal salts may be attributed to the Jahn–Teller distorted nature of copper(II), which weakens water binding in all copper(II) salts

    Near-infrared electroluminescence beyond 940 nm in Pt(N^C^N)X complexes: influencing aggregation with the ancillary ligand X

    Get PDF
    We present a study of aggregate excited states formed by complexes of the type Pt(N^C^N)X, where N^C^N represents a tridentate cyclometallating ligand, and X = SCN or I. These materials display near-infrared (NIR) photoluminescence in film and electroluminescence in NIR OLEDs with λmaxEL = 720–944 nm. We demonstrate that the use of X = SCN or I modulates aggregate formation compared to the parent complexes where X = Cl. While the identity of the monodentate ligand affects the energy of Pt–Pt excimers in solution in only a subtle way, it strongly influences aggregation in film. Detailed calculations on aggregates of different sizes support the experimental conclusions from steady-state and time-resolved luminescence studies at variable temperatures. The use of X = I appears to limit aggregation to the formation of dimers, while X = SCN promotes the formation of larger aggregates, such as tetramers and pentamers, leading in turn to NIR photo- and electroluminescence > 850 nm. A possible explanation for the contrasting influence of the monodentate ligands is the lesser steric hindrance associated with the SCN group compared to the bulkier I ligand. By exploiting the propensity of the SCN complexes to form extended aggregates, we have prepared an NIR-emitting OLED that shows very long wavelength electroluminescence, with λmaxEL = 944 nm and a maximum EQE = 0.3 ± 0.1%. Such data appear to be unprecedented for a device relying on a Pt(II) complex aggregate as the emitter

    Strategies for the synthesis of HBGl3, a glutamic acid derived ligand bearing phenolic and azacarboxylate donor groups at the nitrogen atom

    Get PDF
    The development of a route applicable to the preparation of acyclic glutamic acid-based chelating ligands bearing two different auxiliary donor groups linked to the nitrogen atom by methylene spacers is described and applied to the synthesis of the new polydentate ligand HBGl3, the first example of such a structure. The synthesis is accomplished using a strategy employing reductive amination and t-butyl ester protected intermediates. The most basic pKa values for the HBGl3 ligand have been estimated via potentiometric and UV–Visible titration techniques

    Platinum(II) Complexes of Nonsymmetrical NCN-Coordinating Ligands: Unimolecular and Excimeric Luminescence Properties and Comparison with Symmetrical Analogues

    Get PDF
    A series of seven new platinum(II) complexes PtLnCl have been prepared, where Ln is an NCN-coordinating ligand comprising a benzene ring 1,3-disubstituted with two different azaheterocycles. In PtL1–5Cl, one heterocycle is a simple pyridine ring, while the other is an isoquinoline, a quinoline, a pyrimidine (L1, L2, L3), or a p-CF3- or p-OMe-substituted pyridine (L4 and L5). PtL6Cl incorporates both a p-CF3 and a p-OMe-substituted pyridine. The synthesis of the requisite proligands HLn is achieved using Pd-catalyzed cross-coupling methodology. The molecular structures of six of the Pt(II) complexes have been determined by X-ray diffraction. All the complexes are brightly luminescent in deoxygenated solution at room temperature. The absorption and emission properties are compared with those of the corresponding symmetrical complexes featuring two identical heterocycles, PtLnsymCl, and of the parent Pt(dpyb)Cl containing two unsubstituted pyridines [dpybH = 1,3-di(2-pyridyl)benzene]. While the absorption spectra of the nonsymmetrical complexes show features of both PtLnsymCl and Pt(dpyb)Cl, the emission generally resembles that of whichever of the corresponding symmetrical complexes has the lower-energy emission. PtL1Cl differs in that─at room temperature but not at 77 K─it displays emission bands that can be attributed to excited states involving both the pyridine and the isoquinoline rings, despite the latter being unequivocally lower in energy. This unusual behavior is attributed to thermally activated repopulation of the former excited state from the latter, facilitated by the very long-lived nature of the isoquinoline-based excited state. At elevated concentrations, all the complexes show an additional red-shifted emission band attributable to excimers. For PtL1Cl, the excimer strikingly dominates the emission spectra at all but the lowest concentrations (<10–5 M). Trends in the energies of the excimers and their propensity to form are compared with those of the symmetrical analogues

    Structure and hydration of polyvinylpyrrolidone-hydrogen peroxide

    Get PDF
    The structure of the commercially important polyvinylpyrrolidone-hydrogen peroxide complex can be understood by reference to the co-crystal structure of a hydrogen peroxide complex and its mixed hydrates of a two-monomer unit model compound, bisVP·2H2O2. The mixed hydrates involve selective water substitution into one of the two independent hydrogen peroxide binding sites
    • …
    corecore