Eighteen distinct Pt(II) terpyridyl chloride cross-reactive sensor elements incorporated into microarrays with 1000 x 250 microm well dimensions generate distinctive colorimetric and luminometric responses upon exposure to a variety of volatile organic compounds (VOCs).
The synthesis, structural characterization, and photoluminescence (PL) properties of the square-planar terpyridylplatinum(II) complex [ ( t )Bu 3tpyPtCCtpy] (+) ( 1) and the octahedral trinuclear Fe (II) and Zn (II) analogues [Fe( ( t )Bu 3tpyPtCCtpy) 2] (4+) ( 2) and [Zn( ( t )Bu 3tpyPtCCtpy) 2] (4+) ( 3) are described. The photophysical properties of the mononuclear Pt (II) complex 1 are consistent with a charge-transfer excited-state parentage producing a large Stokes shift with a concomitant broad, structureless emission profile. The Fe-based ligand-field states in 2 provide an efficient nonradiative deactivation pathway for excited-state decay, resulting in a nonemissive compound at room temperature. Interestingly, upon chelation of 1 with Zn (II), a higher energy charge-transfer emission with a low-energy shoulder and a 215 ns excited-state lifetime is produced in 3. A spectroscopically identical species relative to 3 was produced in control experiments when 1 was reacted with excess protons (HClO 4) as ascertained by UV-vis and static PL spectra measured at room temperature and 77 K. Therefore, the chelation of Zn (II) to 1 is acid-base in nature, and its Lewis acidity renders the highest occupied molecular orbital level in 1 much less electron-rich, which induces a blue shift in both the absorption and emission spectra. At 77 K, complexes 1, 3, and protonated 1 display at least one prevalent vibronic component in the emission profile (1360 cm (-1)) resembling PL emanating from a ligand-localized excited-state, indicating that these emitting states are inverted relative to room temperature. These results are qualitatively confirmed by the application of time-dependent theory using only the 1360 cm (-1) mode to reproduce the low-temperature emission spectra.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.