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RESEARCH PRODUCT

Dual Luminescence, Interligand Decay, and Nonradiative Electronic Relaxation of Cyclometalated Iridium Complexes in Solution

Olivier BraemEnrico PomaricoEnrico PomaricoAndrea CannizzoAndrea CannizzoE. BarranoffFabrizio MessinaFabrizio MessinaJohannes H. KleinChristoph LambertMahsa SilataniMajed Chergui

subject

Photoluminescence530 PhysicsPopulationSurfaces Coatings and Filmchemistry.chemical_element02 engineering and technology010402 general chemistryPhotochemistry01 natural sciences540 ChemistryVibrational energy relaxationIridiumPhysical and Theoretical Chemistryeducationeducation.field_of_studyElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialRelaxation (NMR)620 Engineering021001 nanoscience & nanotechnology0104 chemical sciencesSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsEnergy (all)General EnergychemistryFemtosecond0210 nano-technologyLuminescenceExcitation

description

Femtosecond broadband photoluminescence studies are presented for Ir(ppy)3 (Ir1), Ir(ppy)2(pic) (Ir2), Ir(ppy)2(bpy)(PF6) (Ir3), Ir(ppz)3 (Ir4), and Ir(ppz)2dipy (Ir5) (where ppy = 2-phenylpyridine, pic = picolinate, bpy = 2,2′-bipyridine, ppz = 1-phenylpyrazole, and dipy = 5-phenyldipyrrinato) in solution. Upon 400-nm excitation of Ir1–Ir3, we observed a prompt population of the lowest MLCT states. The higher states decay on an ultrafast time scale (3MLCT state undergoes further vibrational relaxation on a 1-ps time scale. In Ir3, this relaxation is accompanied by an interligand decay from the ppy to the bpy ligand in ∼1.5 ps. For the ppy-containing complexes (Ir1 and Ir2), we found that, at 100 ps, the luminescence is red-shifted with respect to the steady-state emission. This is explained in terms of a time-delayed dual luminescence, which we attribute to a double-well minimum configuration of the lowest emitting triplet states involving the ppy moiety. Ir4 shows a prompt population of the lowest excited state, which then undergoes vibrational relaxation in ∼0.5 ps. Finally, at short times, Ir5 exhibits fluorescence from the lowest 1LC state, which decays in ∼100 fs to the manifold of 3LC states. Overall, this study shows that, although the ultrafast relaxation to the lowest electronic states is quite similar to that of other transition-metal complexes, most of the differences occur at the lowest emissive states, with effects such as time-delayed dual fluorescence, interligand decay, and nonradiative relaxation to the ground or lower-lying metal-centered states. Understanding these effects is crucial for obtaining optimal performances of iridium complexes, calling for further iterations between chemical synthesis and photophysical studies to optimize these complexes.

https://doi.org/10.1021/acs.jpcc.6b04896