Mohammad Zafar, Vasudevan Subramaniyan, Kamal Uddin Ansari, Hadar Yakir, David Danovich, Yuri Tulchinsky
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Thioxanthone (TX) molecules and their derivatives are well-known photoactive compounds. Yet, there exist only a handful of luminescent systems combining TX with transition metals. Recently, we reported a TX-based PSP pincer ligand (L1) that appears as a promising platform for filling this niche. Herein, we demonstrate that with Cu(I) this ligand exclusively assembles into dimeric structures with either di- or polynuclear Cu(I) cores. With cationic Cu(I) precursors, complexes featuring solvent-bridged bis-cationic cores were obtained. These coordinatively unsaturated bimetallic systems showed surprisingly facile activation of the chloroform C–Cl bonds, suggesting a possible metal–metal cooperation. The reaction of L1 with binary Cu(I) halides afforded dimeric complexes with polynuclear [CuX]n (n = 3 or 4) cores. With X = Br or I, emissive complexes containing stairstep [CuX]4 clusters were obtained. Emission lifetimes in the microsecond range measured for these complexes were indicative of a triplet emission (phosphorescence), which according to our time-dependent density functional theory study originates from a halide-metal-to-ligand charge transfer between the [CuX]4 cluster and the TX backbone of L1. Finally, the distinctive polynucleating behavior of L1 toward Cu(I) was also showcased by a comparison to another PSP ligand with a diaryl thioether backbone (L2), which formed only mononuclear pincer-type complexes, lacking any unusual reactivity or photoluminescence.
期刊介绍:
Inorganic Chemistry publishes fundamental studies in all phases of inorganic chemistry. Coverage includes experimental and theoretical reports on quantitative studies of structure and thermodynamics, kinetics, mechanisms of inorganic reactions, bioinorganic chemistry, and relevant aspects of organometallic chemistry, solid-state phenomena, and chemical bonding theory. Emphasis is placed on the synthesis, structure, thermodynamics, reactivity, spectroscopy, and bonding properties of significant new and known compounds.