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Jens Uhlig. Portrait.

Jens Uhlig

Senior lecturer

Jens Uhlig. Portrait.

A low-spin Fe(iii) complex with 100-ps ligand-to-metal charge transfer photoluminescence

Author

  • Pavel Chábera
  • Yizhu Liu
  • Om Prakash
  • Erling Thyrhaug
  • Amal El Nahhas
  • Alireza Honarfar
  • Sofia Essén
  • Lisa A. Fredin
  • Tobias C. B. Harlang
  • Kasper S. Kjær
  • Karsten Handrup
  • Fredric Ericson
  • Hideyuki Tatsuno
  • Kelsey Morgan
  • Joachim Schnadt
  • Lennart Häggström
  • Tore Ericsson
  • Adam Sobkowiak
  • Sven Lidin
  • Ping Huang
  • Stenbjörn Styring
  • Jens Uhlig
  • Jesper Bendix
  • Reiner Lomoth
  • Villy Sundström
  • Petter Persson
  • Kenneth Wärnmark

Summary, in English

Transition-metal complexes are used as photosensitizers1, in light-emitting diodes, for biosensing and in photocatalysis2. A key feature in these applications is excitation from the ground state to a charge-transfer state3,4; the long charge-transfer-state lifetimes typical for complexes of ruthenium5 and other precious metals are often essential to ensure high performance. There is much interest in replacing these scarce elements with Earth-abundant metals, with iron6 and copper7 being particularly attractive owing to their low cost and non-toxicity. But despite the exploration of innovative molecular designs6,8,9,10, it remains a formidable scientific challenge11 to access Earth-abundant transition-metal complexes with long-lived charge-transfer excited states. No known iron complexes are considered12 photoluminescent at room temperature, and their rapid excited-state deactivation precludes their use as photosensitizers13,14,15. Here we present the iron complex [Fe(btz)3]3+ (where btz is 3,3′-dimethyl-1,1′-bis(p-tolyl)-4,4′-bis(1,2,3-triazol-5-ylidene)), and show that the superior σ-donor and π-acceptor electron properties of the ligand stabilize the excited state sufficiently to realize a long charge-transfer lifetime of 100 picoseconds (ps) and room-temperature photoluminescence. This species is a low-spin Fe(iii) d5 complex, and emission occurs from a long-lived doublet ligand-to-metal charge-transfer (2LMCT) state that is rarely seen for transition-metal complexes4,16,17. The absence of intersystem crossing, which often gives rise to large excited-state energy losses in transition-metal complexes, enables the observation of spin-allowed emission directly to the ground state and could be exploited as an increased driving force in photochemical reactions on surfaces. These findings suggest that appropriate design strategies can deliver new iron-based materials for use as light emitters and photosensitizers.

Department/s

  • Chemical Physics
  • Centre for Analysis and Synthesis
  • Computational Chemistry
  • MAX IV Laboratory
  • Synchrotron Radiation Research
  • Department of Physics
  • Faculty of Science
  • Biochemistry and Structural Biology
  • eSSENCE: The e-Science Collaboration
  • NanoLund: Centre for Nanoscience

Publishing year

2017-03-29

Language

English

Pages

695-699

Publication/Series

Nature

Volume

543

Issue

7647

Document type

Journal article

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Topic

  • Theoretical Chemistry (including Computational Chemistry)
  • Atom and Molecular Physics and Optics
  • Physical Chemistry (including Surface- and Colloid Chemistry)

Status

Published

ISBN/ISSN/Other

  • ISSN: 0028-0836