Abstract

Great attention is currently paid to the synthesis of polynuclear transition metal complexes and the study of their photochemical, photophysical, and electrochemical properties. This interest is stimulated, in particular, by attempts to design and construct multicomponent systems (often called supramolecular species) capable of performing useful lightand/or redox-induced functions.1-16 A great deal of investigations on mononuclear transition metal complexes had previously shown that several families of these compounds are very interesting from the electrochemical, photochemical, and photophysical viewpoints.17-22 The metalligand interaction, in fact, is often (i) weak enough to allow the manifestation of intrinsic properties of metal and ligands (e.g., ligand-centered and metalcentered absorption bands and redox waves) and, at the same time, (ii) strong enough to cause the appearance of new properties, characteristic of the whole compound (e.g., metal-to-ligand or ligand-tometal charge-transfer bands). On passing from mononuclear to polynuclear transition metal complexes, the situation becomes even more interesting because in the latter (supramolecular) compounds one can find, besides properties related to each metal-based component, properties related to the structure and composition of the whole array. A suitable choice of the mononuclear building blocks and bridging ligands and an appropriate design of the (supramolecular) structure can in fact allow the occurrence of very interesting and potentially useful processes such as energy transfer along predetermined pathways, photoinduced charge separation, multielectron exchange at a predetermined potential, etc. The knowledge on the luminescence and redox properties of polynuclear transition metal complexes is rapidly accumulating, but it is disperse in a great number of journals. We have made an attempt to collect the available results, and we present them together with some fundamental introductory concepts and a few comments. One of the main problems, of course, was to delimit the field of this review. Using personal criteria which are related to our own research interests, we decided to consider only polynuclear transition metal complexes that can be defined as supramolecular species (section 2.2) and that are reported to exhibit luminescence. For such compounds only, the electrochemical properties have also been reviewed. Furthermore, we decided to include only classical (Werner-type) polynuclear transition metal compounds where the number of metal-based units is exactly known and the connection between the metal centers is provided only by bridging ligands. Thus, a number of interesting systems such as polymer-appended metal † In memoriam of Mauro Ciano. 759 Chem. Rev. 1996, 96, 759−833

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