Abstract

The 77 K emission spectra of cyclometalated ruthenium(II)-2,2'-bipyridine (CM-Ru-bpy) chromophores are very similar to those of related Ru-bpy complexes with am(m)ine or diimmine ancillary ligands, and density functional theory (DFT) modeling confirms that the lowest energy triplet metal to ligand charge transfer (3MLCT) excited states of CM-Ru-bpy and related Ru-bpy complexes have very similar electronic configurations. However, the phosphorescence decay efficiencies of CM-Ru-bpy excited states are about twice those of the conventional Ru-bpy analogues. In contrast to the similar 3MLCT excited state electronic configurations of the two classes of complexes, the CM-Ru-bpy chromophores have much broader visible region MLCT absorptions resulting from several overlapping transitions, even at 87 K. The emitting excited-state emission efficiencies depend on spin-orbit coupling (SOC) mediated intensity stealing from singlet excited states, and this work explores the relationship between the phosphorescence efficiency and visible region absorption spectra of Ru-bpy 3MLCT excited states in the weak SOC limit. The intrinsic 3MLCT emission efficiency, ιem, depends on mixing with singlet excited states whose RuIII-dπ-orbital angular momenta differ from that of the emitting state. DFT modeling of the 1MLCT excited-state electronic configurations that contribute significantly to the lowest energy absorption bands have RuIII-dπ orbitals that differ from those of their emitting 3MLCT excited states. This leads to a very close relationship between ιem and the lowest energy MLCT band absorptivities in Ru-bpy chromophores. Thus, the larger number of 1MLCT transitions that contribute to the lowest energy absorption bands accounts for the enhanced phosphorescence efficiency of Ru-bpy complexes with cyclometalated ancillary ligands.

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