Tuning the photophysical behavior of luminescent cyclam derivatives by cation binding and excited state redox potential


Autoria(s): Moore, E. G.; Bernhardt, P. V.; Furstenberg, A.; Riley, M. J.; Smith, T.; Vauthey, E.
Data(s)

01/01/2005

Resumo

The emission from two photoactive 14-membered macrocyclic ligands, 6-((naphthalen-1-ylmethyl)-amino)trans-6,13-dimethyl- 13-amino- 1,4,8,11 -tetraaza-cyclotetradecane (L-1) and 6-((anthracen-9-ylmethyl)-amino)trans-6,13 -dimethyl - 13 -amino- 1,4,8, 1 1-tetraaza-cyclotetradecane (L-2) is strongly quenched by a photoinduced electron transfer (PET) mechanism involving amine lone pairs as electron donors. Time-correlated single photon counting (TCSPC), multiplex transient grating (TG), and fluorescence upconversion (FU) measurements were performed to characterize this quenching mechanism. Upon complexation with the redox inactive metal ion, Zn(II), the emission of the ligands is dramatically altered, with a significant increase in the fluorescence quantum yields due to coordination-induced deactivation of the macrocyclic amine lone pair electron donors. For [ZnL2](2+), the substituted exocyclic amine nitrogen, which is not coordinated to the metal ion, does not quench the fluorescence due to an inductive effect of the proximal divalent metal ion that raises the ionization potential. However, for [ZnL1](2+), the naphthalene chromophore is a sufficiently strong excited-state oxidant for PET quenching to occur.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:75983

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Amer Chemical Soc

Palavras-Chave #Physics, Atomic, Molecular & Chemical #Photoinduced Electron-transfer #Crossing Rate-constant #Energy Transfer #Fluorescence Parameters #Charge-recombination #Metal-complexes #Ion-pairs #Anthracene #Recognition #Sensors #Chemistry, Physical #C1 #250201 Transition Metal Chemistry #780103 Chemical sciences
Tipo

Journal Article