6533b7d4fe1ef96bd1262ac4

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Transient FTIR spectroscopy after one- and two-colour excitation on a highly luminescent chromium(III) complex.

Patrick Di Martino-fumoGereon Niedner-schatteburgKatja HeinzePit BodenMarkus GerhardsWolfram W. Seidel

subject

PhotoluminescenceMaterials science010405 organic chemistryGeneral Physics and Astronomy010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciences0104 chemical sciencesMicrosecondsymbols.namesakeExcited statesymbolsPhysical and Theoretical ChemistryLuminescenceRaman spectroscopyGround stateSpectroscopyDoublet state

description

The development of photoactive transition metal complexes with Earth-abundant metals is a rapidly growing research field, where a deeper understanding of the underlying photophysical processes is of great importance. A multitude of potential applications in the fields of photosensitizing, optical sensing, photoluminescence and photoredox catalysis motivates demanding spectroscopic studies. We applied a series of high-level spectroscopic methods on the previously reported highly luminescent chromium(iii) complex [Cr(ddpd)2](BF4)3 (ddpd = N,N'-dimethyl-N,N'-dipyridine-2-ylpyridine-2,6-diamine) possessing two near-IR emissive doublet states with microsecond lifetimes. Luminescence measurements were performed at temperatures down to about 10 K, showing a remarkable rise of the integrated emission intensity by more than a factor of three. The emissive doublet states were structurally characterized by transient FTIR spectroscopy at 290 K and 20 K, supplemented by ground state FTIR and Raman spectroscopy in combination with density functional theory. According to emission and step-scan FT-IR spectroscopy, the stronger luminescence at lower temperature arises from decreased non-radiative decay via energy transfer to CH vibrational overtones and increased radiative decay based on lowered symmetry. Pump/pump/probe (FTIR) and pump/dump/probe (FTIR) schemes were developed to modulate the excited doublet state populations at 290 and 20 K as a function of specific near-IR pump vs. dump wavelengths. The effect of the second near-IR pulse can be explained by combinations of excited state absorption, ground state absorption and stimulated emission. The successful establishment of these two-colour step-scan FTIR experiments is an important step towards profound studies on further transition metal complexes with energetically close-lying excited states in the near future.

10.1039/d1cp01077hhttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34139001