In this study, we present two ruthenium(ii) diimine complexes appended with ferrocene which show metal to ligand charge transfer 3MLCT emission lifetimes around 630 ns.
In this study, we
show that the “Michler’s base”
motif can be combined in a donor–acceptor arrangement with
a range of acceptor units (indandione, indandione with cyano substituents,
barbituric acid, or rhodanine) to give photophysical properties that
are dominated by delocalized excited states. By changing the acceptor
unit and by altering the planarity of this system, it is possible
to tune the low-energy absorption feature in terms of intensity from
23 000 to 67 000 M–1 cm–1 and energy between 500 and 700 nm. Resonance Raman spectroscopy
and time-dependent density functional theory indicate that this absorption
feature has two underlying transitions: a weaker charge-transfer transition
around 500 nm and a strong mixed or delocalized transition between
550 and 700 nm. Generally, these compounds are not strongly emissive;
however, dual emission is observed, and the relative intensity of
the two states can be modulated by solvent polarity. The energy of
these emissive states does not correlate with the Lippert–Mataga
analysis in which the Stokes shift is related to the solvent polarity
(Δf).
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