The reaction of two
equivalents of N,N’-bis(2-pyrrolylmethylidene)-1,2-phenylenediamine
(H2bppda)
with tetrabenzylzirconium provided the air- and moisture-stable eight-coordinate
complex Zr(bppda)2. Temperature-dependent steady-state
and time-resolved emission spectroscopy established weak photoluminescence
(ΦPL = 0.4% at 293 K) by a combination of prompt
fluorescence and thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) upon
visible light excitation at and around room temperature. TADF emission
is strongly quenched by 3O2 and shows highly
temperature-sensitive emission lifetimes of hundreds of microseconds.
The lifetime of the lowest energy singlet excited state, S1, was established by transient absorption spectroscopy and shows
rapid deactivation (τ = 142 ps) by prompt fluorescence and intersystem
crossing to the triplet state, T1. Time-dependent density
functional theory (TD-DFT) calculations predict moderate ligand-to-metal
charge transfer (LMCT) contributions of 25–30% for the S1 and T1 states. A comparison of Zr(bppda)2 to related zirconium pyridine dipyrrolide complexes, Zr(PDP)2, revealed important electronic structure changes due to the
eight-coordinate ligand environment in Zr(bppda)2, which
were correlated to differences in the photophysical properties between
the two compound classes