Adaptive photoluminescence through a bioinspired antioxidative mechanism.

Chem Sci

Universität Münster, Institut für Anorganische und Analytische Chemie Corrensstraße 28/30 48149 Münster Germany

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Transition metal complexes are used as luminescent probes in fields like optoelectronics and biomedicine, but their effectiveness is hindered by issues like photobleaching and photooxidative stress.
  • The research introduces ascorbic acid (vitamin C) as a way to prevent photobleaching in a new Pt(II) complex, showing that it can enhance luminescence by scavenging harmful oxygen produced during exposure to light.
  • This method of oxidative protection is adaptable and has potential applications in other coordination compounds, improving the stability of luminophores for broader use in scientific and technological fields.

Article Abstract

Transition metal complexes are archetypal luminescent probes that are widely used for various applications ranging from optoelectronics to biomedicine. However, they face significant challenges such as photobleaching and photooxidative stress, which limit their performance. Herein, we introduce a photosystem-inspired concept based on the use of a vitamin (ascorbic acid, Asc-Ac) to adaptively suppress photobleaching of molecular luminophores. As a proof-of-concept compound, we have selected a new bis-cyclometalated Pt(II) complex (Pt-Bu) and investigated its adaptive photoluminescence resulting from singlet dioxygen (O) photoproduction in the presence of Asc-Ac. Interestingly, the excited state quenching and subsequent photobleaching of Pt-Bu in aerated solutions is suppressed by addition of Asc-Ac, which scavenges the O photosensitized by Pt-Bu upon irradiation and results in an adaptive oxygen depletion with enhancement of luminescence. The adaptation is resilient for successive irradiation cycles with oxygen replenishment, until peroxidation overshooting leads to the degradation of Pt-Bu by formation of a dark Pt(iv) species. The complexity-related adaptation with initial overperformance (luminescence boost) relies on the external energy input and cascaded feedback loops, thus biomimicking inflammation, as the repeated exposure to a stressor leads to a final breakdown. Our antioxidative protection mechanism against photobleaching can be successfully extended to multiple coordination compounds (, Ir(iii), Ru(ii) and Re(i) complexes), thus demonstrating its generality. Our findings broaden the scope of molecular adaptation and pave the way for enhancing the stability of molecular luminophores for multiple applications.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11515932PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d4sc06096bDOI Listing

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