20 research outputs found
Deciphering Three Beneficial Effects of 2,2 '-Bipyridine-N,N '-Dioxide on the Luminescence Sensitization of Lanthanide(III) Hexafluoroacetylacetonate Ternary Complexes
Lanthanide hexafluoroacetylacetonate ternary complexes with 2,2'-bipyridine-N,N'-dioxide, [Ln(hfa)3(bpyO2)], were synthesized for Ln = Eu, Gd, Tb, and Lu and fully characterized by elemental, thermal, and mass-spectrometric analyses. The X-ray crystal structure of [Eu(hfa) 3(bpyO2)].0.5C6H6 reveals an octa-coordinate metal ion lying in a severely distorted trigonal dodecahedron geometry; the Eu-O distances lie in the range 2.36-2.44 Å with no significant difference between hfa- and bpyO2. A detailed comparative photophysical investigation has been carried out to determine the exact influence of the introduction of bpyO2 in the inner coordination sphere of the metal ion in replacement of the two water molecules in [Ln(hfa)3(H2O)2]. While this replacement is detrimental for Tb, it leads to a 15-fold increase in the overall quantum yield for Eu. This large improvement originates from (i) a better sensitization efficiency, the ancillary ligand being responsible for 3/4 of the energy transfer, (ii) elimination of nonradiative deactivation pathways through harmonics of O-H vibrations, and (iii) reduction in the radiative lifetime. The latter influence is rarely documented, but it accounts here for ã25% increase in the intrinsic quantum yield, so that more attention should be given to this parameter when designing highly luminescent lanthanide complexes. © 2011 American Chemical Society
OLEDs based on some mixed-ligand terbium carboxylates and zinc complexes with tetradentate Schiff bases: Mechanisms of electroluminescence degradation
International audienc
Deciphering Three Beneficial Effects of 2,2′-Bipyridine- N , N ′-Dioxide on the Luminescence Sensitization of Lanthanide(III) Hexafluoroacetylacetonate Ternary Complexes
International audienc
Electroluminescent properties of the mixed-ligand complex of terbium salicylate with triphenylphosphine oxide
International audienc
Reactive Chemical Vapor Deposition Method as New Approach for Obtaining Electroluminescent Thin Film Materials
The new reactive chemical vapor deposition (RCVD) method has been proposed for thin film deposition of luminescent nonvolatile lanthanide aromatic carboxylates. This method is based on metathesis reaction between the vapors of volatile lanthanide dipivaloylmethanate (Ln(dpm)3) and carboxylic acid (HCarb orH2Carb′) and was successfully used in case of HCarb. Advantages of the method were demonstrated on example of terbium benzoate (Tb(bz)3) and o-phenoxybenzoate thin films, and Tb(bz)3 thin films were successfully examined in the OLED with the following structure glass/ITO/PEDOT:PSS/TPD/Tb(bz)3/Ca/Al. Electroluminescence spectra of Tb(bz)3 showed only typical luminescent bands, originated from transitions of the terbium ion. Method peculiarities for deposition of compounds of dibasic acids H2Carb′ are established on example of terbium and europium terephtalates and europium 2,6-naphtalenedicarboxylate
Heteroleptic complexes of terbium(III) phenylanthranilate (Tb(PA)(3)) with triphenylphosphine oxide (TPPO): A Tb(PA)(3)(TPPO)2-based electroluminescent device
International audienceHeteroleptic complexes of terbium(III) phenylanthranilate with triphenylphosphine oxide of composition Tb(PA)3(TPPO)n (n = 1 or 2) were synthesized and characterized by elemental analysis, IR and photoluminescence spectroscopy, and thermal analysis. The structures of Tb(PA)3(TPPO)2 and Tb(PA)3(Phen) in solution were studied by the MALDI TOF-MS method. The photoluminescence properties of the terbium(III) complex with phenylanthranilic acid were compared with those of the terbium(III) complex with salicylic acid. An electroluminescent device with the structure ITO/PEDOT : PSS/PVC/Tb(PA)3(TPPO)2 /Al was constructed. The possibility of using heteroleptic aromatic carboxylates as emission layers for the construction of electroluminescent devices was exemplified by the Tb(PA)3(TPPO)2 comple
Highly Luminescent and Triboluminescent Coordination Polymers Assembled from Lanthanide beta-Diketonates and Aromatic Bidentate O-Donor Ligands
The reaction of hydrated lanthanide hexafluoroacetylacetonates, [Ln(hfa)(3)(H2O)(2)], with 1,4-disubstituted benzenes afforded a new series of one-dimensional coordination polymers [Ln(hfa)(3)(Q)](infinity), where Ln = Eu, Gd, Tb, and Lu and Q = 1,4-diacetylbenzene (acbz), 1,4-diacetoxybenzene (acetbz), or 1,4-dimethyltherephtalate (dmtph). X-ray single crystal analyses reveal [Ln(hfa)(3)(acbz)](infinity) (Ln = Eu, Gd, Tb) consisting of zigzag polymeric chains with Ln Ln Ln angles equal to 128 degrees, while the arrays are more linear in [Eu(hfa)(3)(acetbz)infinity and [Eu(hfa)(3)(dmtph)](infinity), with Ln Ln Ln angles of 165 degrees and 180 degrees, respectively. In all structures, Ln(III) ions are 8-coordinate and lie in distorted square-antiprismatic environments. The coordination polymers are thermally stable up to 180-210 degrees C under a nitrogen atmosphere. Their volatility has been tested in vacuum sublimation experiments at 200-250 degrees C and 10(-2) Torr: the metal organic frameworks with acetbz and dmtph can be quantitatively sublimed, while [Ln(hfa)(3)(acbz)](infinity) undergoes thermal decomposition. The triplet state energies of the ancillary ligands, 21 600 (acetbz), 22 840 (acbz), and 24 500 (dmtph) cm(-1), lie in an ideal range for sensitizing the luminescence of Eu-III and/or Tb-III. As a result, all of the [Ln(hfa)(3)(Q)](infinity) polymers display bright red or green luminescence due to the characteristic D-5(0)-> F-7(J)(J=0-4) or D-5(4) -> F-7(J) (J=6-0) transitions, respectively. Absolute quantum yields reach 51(Eu) and 56(Tb) % for the frameworks built from dmtph. Thin films of [Eu(hfa)(3)(Q)](infinity) with 100-170 nm thickness can be obtained by thermal evaporation (P<3 x 10(-5) Torr, 200-250 degrees C). They are stable over a long period of time, and their photophysical parameters are similar to those of the bulk samples so that their use as active materials in luminescent devices can be envisaged. Mixtures of [Ln(hfa)(3)(dmpth)](infinity) with Ln = Eu and Tb yield color-tunable microcrystalline materials from red to green. Finally, the crystalline samples exhibit strong triboluminescence, which could be useful in the design of pressure and/or damage detection probes