A series
of copper(I) complexes bearing a cyclic (amino)(aryl)carbene
(CAArC) ligand with various complex geometries have been investigated
in great detail with regard to their structural, electronic, and photophysical
properties. Comparison of [CuX(CAArC)] (X = Br (1), Cbz
(2), acac (3), Ph2acac (4), Cp (5), and Cp* (6)) with known
CuI complexes bearing cyclic (amino)(alkyl), monoamido,
or diamido carbenes (CAAC, MAC, or DAC, respectively) as chromophore
ligands reveals that the expanded π-system of the CAArC leads
to relatively low energy absorption maxima between 350 and 550 nm
in THF with high absorption coefficients of 5–15 × 103 M–1 cm–1 for 1–6. Furthermore, 1–5 show intense deep red to near-IR emission involving their
triplet excited states in the solid state and in PMMA films with λem
max = 621–784 nm. Linear [Cu(Cbz)(DippCAArC)] (2) has been found to be an exceptional
deep red (λmax = 621 nm, ϕ = 0.32, τav = 366 ns) thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF)
emitter with a radiative rate constant k
r of ca. 9 × 105 s–1, exceeding
those of commercially employed IrIII- or PtII-based emitters. Time-resolved transient absorption and fluorescence
upconversion experiments complemented by quantum chemical calculations
employing Kohn–Sham density functional theory and multireference
configuration interaction methods as well as temperature-dependent
steady-state and time-resolved luminescence studies provide a detailed
picture of the excited-state dynamics of 2. To demonstrate
the potential applicability of this new class of low-energy emitters
in future photonic applications, such as nonclassical light sources
for quantum communication or quantum cryptography, we have successfully
conducted single-molecule photon-correlation experiments of 2, showing distinct antibunching as required for single-photon
emitters.