A series of benzobis(imidazolium) (BBI) salts has been prepared and studied as a new class of versatile fluorescent materials. Using a high yielding, modular synthetic strategy, BBI salts with a range of functionality poised for investigating fundamental and applications-oriented characteristics, including emission wavelength tunability, solvatochromism, red-edge excitation, chemical stability, multiphoton excitation, and protein conjugation, were prepared in overall yields of 40-97%. Through structural variation, the BBIs exhibited lambda(em) ranging between 329 and 561 nm while displaying phi(f)s up to 0.91. In addition, the emission characteristics of these salts were found to exhibit strong solvent dependencies with Stokes shifts ranging from 4570 to 13 793 cm(-1), depending on the nature of the BBI core. Although red-edge effects for BBI salts with Br and BF4 counterions were found to be similar, unique characteristics were displayed by an analogue with MeSO4 anions. The stability of an amphiphilic BBI was quantified in aqueous solutions of varying pH, and >85% of the emission intensity was retained after 2 h at pH 3-9. Through multiphoton excitation experiments in aqueous solutions, a BBI salt was found to exhibit three-photon fluorescence action cross sections similar to serotonin. The application of BBI salts as fluorescent protein tags was demonstrated by conjugating bovine serum albumin to a maleimide-functionalized derivative.
A series of group 10 bis(benzimidazolylidene) complexes featuring chelating N-(o-phenol) moieties were synthesized and characterized. The ligand was prepared in 85% overall yield from 1-fluoro-2-nitrobenzene using a short SNAr/reductive cyclization/alkylation reaction sequence. Direct metalation of the respective benzimidazolium precursor with Ni(II), Pd(II), and Pt(II) salts under ambient atmosphere at 50−80 °C provided the discrete chelating complexes in excellent yields (≥91%). Whereas chelation occurred spontaneously in the case of the Ni complex, an intermediate displaying ligation from the NHCs without chelation from pendent phenol groups was isolated and characterized when Pd was used. This complex was subsequently converted to its chelated form upon treatment with base. The effect of chelation was measured via thermogravimetric analysis and found to enhance the stability of the complex by 24 °C. The chelation also did not significantly effect overall electronic characteristics. A similar reaction sequence was observed when Pt was used, but the respective intermediate could not be isolated. Chelated Ni, Pd, and Pt complexes were characterized by X-ray crystallography and found to exhibit cis configurations about their respective square-planar metal centers. Based on these model systems, a new class of main-chain organometallic polymers comprised of a benzobis(imidazolylidene) ligand with chelating phenolate moieties and group 10 transition metals was synthesized and characterized. The respective bis(bidentate) ligand was prepared from 1,5-dichloro-2,4-dinitrobenzene in three chromatography-free steps in 78% overall yield from commercially-available starting materials and used as monomer. Consistent with the model studies, direct metalation of the monomer was accomplished by addition of a stoichiometric amount of metal(II) salt under basic conditions, which resulted in excellent yields (≥95%) of the respective organometallic polymers with molecular weights up to 363,000 g/moL (relative to polystyrene standards). The polymers were found to be exceptionally air- and moisture-stable and displayed thermal stabilities exceeding 350 °C (under nitrogen), as measured by thermogravimetric analysis. Electronic absorption measurements indicated the λmax values of these polymers ranged between 312 and 322 nm, depending on the incorporated transition metal, and were bathochromically shifted by up to 27 nm relative to their corresponding model complexes.
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