27 research outputs found

    Excited State Dynamics of Bistridentate and Trisbidentate RuII Complexes of Quinoline-Pyrazole Ligands

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    Three homoleptic ruthenium(II) complexes, [Ru(Q3PzH)3]2+, [Ru(Q1Pz)3]2+, and [Ru(DQPz)2]2+, based on the quinoline-pyrazole ligands, Q3PzH (8-(3-pyrazole)-quinoline), Q1Pz (8-(1-pyrazole)-quinoline), and DQPz (bis(quinolinyl)-1,3-pyrazole), have been spectroscopically and theoretically investigated. Spectral component analysis, transient absorption spectroscopy, density functional theory calculations, and ligand exchange reactions with different chlorination agents reveal that the excited state dynamics for Ru(II) complexes with these biheteroaromatic ligands differ significantly from that of traditional polypyridyl complexes. Despite the high energy and low reorganization energy of the excited state, nonradiative decay dominates even at liquid nitrogen temperatures, where triplet metal-to-ligand-charge-transfer emission quantum yields range from 0.7 to 3.8%, and microsecond excited state lifetimes are observed. In contrast to traditional polypyridyl complexes where ligand exchange is facilitated by expansion of the metal-ligand bonds to stabilize a metal-centered state, photoinduced ligand exchange occurs in the bidentate complexes despite no substantial MC state population, while the tridentate complex is extremely photostable despite an activated decay route, highlighting the versatile photochemistry of nonpolypyridine ligands.\ua0\ua9 2019 American Chemical Society

    Finding intersections between electronic excited state potential energy surfaces with simultaneous ultrafast X-ray scattering and spectroscopy

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    Light-driven molecular reactions are dictated by the excited state potential energy landscape, depending critically on the location of conical intersections and intersystem crossing points between potential surfaces where non-adiabatic effects govern transition probabilities between distinct electronic states. While ultrafast studies have provided significant insight into electronic excited state reaction dynamics, experimental approaches for identifying and characterizing intersections and seams between electronic states remain highly system dependent. Here we show that for 3d transition metal systems simultaneously recorded X-ray diffuse scattering and X-ray emission spectroscopy at sub-70 femtosecond time-resolution provide a solid experimental foundation for determining the mechanistic details of excited state reactions. In modeling the mechanistic information retrieved from such experiments, it becomes possible to identify the dominant trajectory followed during the excited state cascade and to determine the relevant loci of intersections between states. We illustrate our approach by explicitly mapping parts of the potential energy landscape dictating the light driven low-to-high spin-state transition (spin crossover) of [Fe(2,2′-bipyridine)3]2+, where the strongly coupled nuclear and electronic dynamics have been a source of interest and controversy. We anticipate that simultaneous X-ray diffuse scattering and X-ray emission spectroscopy will provide a valuable approach for mapping the reactive trajectories of light-triggered molecular systems involving 3d transition metals

    Chemical consequences of pyrazole orientation in RuII complexes of unsymmetric quinoline-pyrazole ligands

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    A series of homoleptic RuII complexes including the tris-bidentate complexes of a new bidentate ligand 8-(1-pyrazol)-quinoline (Q1Pz) and bidentate 8-(3-pyrazol)-quinoline (Q3PzH), as well as the bis-tridentate complex of bis(quinolinyl)-1,3-pyrazole (DQPz) was studied. Together these complexes explore the orientation of the pyrazole relative to the quinoline. By examining the complexes structurally, photophysically, photochemically, electrochemically, and computationally by DFT and TD-DFT, it is shown that the pyrazole orientation has a significant influence on key properties. In particular, its orientation has noticeable effects on oxidation and reduction potentials, photostability and proton sensitivity, indicating that [Ru(Q3PzH)3]2+ is a particularly good local environment acidity-probe candidate

    Diastereomerization Dynamics of a Bistridentate Ru-II Complex

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    The unsymmetrical nature of a new tridentate ligand bis(quinolinyl)-1,3-pyrazole (DQPz) is exploited in a bistridentate Ru(II) complex [Ru(DQPz)2](2+) to elucidate an unexpected dynamic diastereomerism. Structural characterization based on a combination of nuclear magnetic resonance spectroscopy and density functional theory calculations reveals the first quantifiable diastereomerization dynamics for Ru complexes with fully conjugated tridentate heteroaromatic ligands. A mechanism that involves a large-scale twisting motion of the ligands is proposed to explain the dynamic interconversion between the observed diastereomers, and the analysis of both experiments :and calculations reveals a potential energy landscape with a transition barrier for the diastereomerization of similar to 70 kJ mol(-1). The structural-flexibility demonstrated around the central transition metal ion has implications for integration of complexes into catalytic and photochemical applications

    Systematic synthesis of functional unsymmetric FeZn model complexes for plant purple acid phosphatases.

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    The heterodinuclear complexes [FeZn(L)(CH(3)CO(2))(2)](+) (L = ICIMP or IPCPMP) are structural models for the dinuclear active sites of plant purple acid phosphatases They can be systematically synthesized from mononuclear iron complexes and enhance the rate of transesterification of 2-hydroxypropyl p-nitrophenyl phosphate, an assay for the catalytic hydrolysis performed by purple acid phosphatase

    Visualizing the coordination-spheres of photoexcited transition metal complexes with ultrafast hard X-rays

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    The concept of coordination sphere (CS) is central to the rational development of hierarchical molecular assemblies in modern chemistry. Manipulating the organization around transition metal ions with covalent and supramolecular interactions is a general strategy that underlies most synthetic protocols. Achieving similar control for photoexcited molecular complexes is necessary to advance the design of light-driven functionalities. This objective calls for monitoring the ultrafast dynamics of the primary (1-CS) and the secondary (2-CS) coordination spheres on the atomic scale, which remains to date an important experimental challenge for short-lived species. In this work, transient wide-angle scattering of hard X-rays (25 keV) is employed with state-of-the-art AIMD simulations in order to visualize the 1-CS (solute-only) and the 2-CS (solvation cage) of the photoinduced high-spin (HS) state for [Fe(bpy) 3 ] 2+ (bpy = 2,2′-bipyridine) in aqueous solution. Correlating this structural information in real-space reveals the interlacing of the two CS, which in turn explains why solvation affects the photoinduced electronic and structural dynamics in this class of complexes. More generally, these results obtained for a prominent prototypical system in ultrafast X-ray sciences demonstrate the unique perspectives offered by this technique to gain the crucial knowledge about the multiscale solvation dynamics that is currently missing for controlling the solute-solvent interactions in advanced functional nano and biomaterials employed for photoconversion
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