Cyclometalated iridium(III) complexes are frequently employed in organic light emitting diodes, and they are popular photocatalysts for solar energy conversion and synthetic organic chemistry. They luminesce from redox-active excited states that can have high triplet energies and long lifetimes, making them well suited for energy transfer and photoredox catalysis. Homoleptic tris(cyclometalated) iridium(III) complexes are typically very hydrophobic and do not dissolve well in polar solvents, somewhat limiting their application scope. We developed a family of water-soluble sulfonate-decorated variants with tailored redox potentials and excited-state energies to address several key challenges in aqueous photochemistry.First, we aimed at combining enzyme with photoredox catalysis to synthesize enantioenriched products in a cyclic reaction network. Since the employed biocatalyst operates best in aqueous solution, a water-soluble photocatalyst was needed. A new tris(cyclometalated) iridium(III) complex provided enough reducing power for the photochemical reduction of imines to racemic mixtures of amines and furthermore was compatible with monoamine oxidase (MAO-N-9), which deracemized this mixture through a kinetic resolution of the racemic amine via oxidation to the corresponding imine. This process led to the accumulation of the unreactive amine enantiomer over time. In subsequent studies, we discovered that the same iridium(III) complex photoionizes under intense irradiation to give hydrated electrons as a result of consecutive two-photon excitation. With visible light as energy input, hydrated electrons become available in a catalytic fashion, thereby allowing the comparatively mild reduction of substrates that would typically only be reactive under harsher conditions. Finally, we became interested in photochemical upconversion in aqueous solution, for which it was desirable to obtain water-soluble iridium(III) compounds with very high triplet excited-state energies. This goal was achieved through improved ligand design and ultimately enabled sensitized triplet-triplet annihilation upconversion unusually far into the ultraviolet spectral range.Studies of photoredox catalysis, energy transfer catalysis, and photochemical upconversion typically rely on the use of organic solvents. Water could potentially be an attractive alternative in many cases, but photocatalyst development lags somewhat behind for aqueous solution compared to organic solvent. The purpose of this Account is to provide an overview of the breadth of new research perspectives that emerged from the development of water-soluble -[Ir(ppy)] complexes (ppy = 2-phenylpyridine) with sulfonated ligands. We hope to inspire the use of some of these or related coordination compounds in aqueous photochemistry and to stimulate further conceptual developments at the interfaces of coordination chemistry, photophysics, biocatalysis, and sustainable chemistry.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/acs.accounts.2c00075 | DOI Listing |
Small Methods
November 2024
State Key Laboratory of Organic Electronics and Information Displays & Jiangsu Key Laboratory for Biosensors, Institute of Advanced Materials (IAM) & Institute of Flexible Electronics (Future Technology), Nanjing University of Posts & Telecommunications, 9 Wenyuan Road, Nanjing, 210023, P. R. China.
Electroluminochromic (ELC) materials have garnered significant research interest because of their potential applications in lighting, displaying, and sensing. These materials exhibit reversible modulation of photoluminescence under low-voltage stimuli. Here five phosphorescent iridium(III) complexes are reported featuring viologen-substituted 2-phenylpyridine (Vppy) ligands acting as electroactive components.
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February 2024
Division of Applied Chemistry and Frontier Chemistry Center, Faculty of Engineering, Hokkaido University Sapporo Hokkaido Japan
Tris-cyclometalated iridium(iii) complexes have received widespread attention as attractive prospective materials for , organic light-emitting diodes (OLEDs), photoredox catalysts, and bioimaging probes. However, their preparation usually requires prolonged reaction times, significant amounts of high-boiling solvents, multistep synthesis, and inert-gas-line techniques. Unfortunately, these requirements represent major drawbacks from both a production-cost and an environmental perspective.
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May 2023
Kurnakov Institute of General and Inorganic Chemistry, Russian Academy of Sciences, Leninskii pr. 31, Moscow 119991, Russia.
The synthesis, structure, optical and redox properties as well as photovoltaic studies of iridium(III) complexes with cyclometalated 2-arylbenzimidazoles decorated with various polyaromatic fragments and an ancillary aromatic β-diketone are reported. Despite the strong preference of the iridium(III) ion to form bis- or tris-cyclometalated complexes in which the metal participates in five-membered metallacycles, the cyclometalation of the benzimidazole ligands containing rigid π-extended systems yields dimeric complexes containing strained five- or six-membered metallacycles and allows for generating an extremely rare monocyclometalated complex. X-ray crystallography shows that the steric strain observed in the dimers is retained in heteroleptic diketonate complexes which is also corroborated by gas-phase DFT calculations.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAcc Chem Res
May 2022
Department of Chemistry, University of Basel, St. Johanns-Ring 19, 4056 Basel, Switzerland.
Cyclometalated iridium(III) complexes are frequently employed in organic light emitting diodes, and they are popular photocatalysts for solar energy conversion and synthetic organic chemistry. They luminesce from redox-active excited states that can have high triplet energies and long lifetimes, making them well suited for energy transfer and photoredox catalysis. Homoleptic tris(cyclometalated) iridium(III) complexes are typically very hydrophobic and do not dissolve well in polar solvents, somewhat limiting their application scope.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDalton Trans
October 2020
Key Laboratory of Metallurgical Emission Reduction & Resources Recycling, Ministry of Education, Institute of Molecular Engineering and Applied Chemistry, School of Metallurgy Engineering, Anhui University of Technology, Maanshan, 243002, Anhui, China.
Three novel phosphorescent iridium(iii) complexes with thieno[2,3-d]pyridazine derivatives as cyclometalating chelates were successfully synthesized. These complexes exhibited intense green or yellow phosphorescence emission with short lifetimes of 1.71-1.
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