화학공학소재연구정보센터
Inorganic Chemistry, Vol.45, No.17, 6666-6677, 2006
Aggregation in nanobundles and the effect of diverse environments on the solution-phase photochemistry and photophysics of -Re(CO)(3)L+ (L=1,10-phenanthroline, 2,2'-bipyridine) pendants bonded to poly(4-vinylpyridine)
The UV-vis spectroscopy and photochemical properties of {(vpy-[Re(CO)(3)(2,2'-bpy)])m(vpy-[Re(CO)(3)(phen)])n(vpy)(p)}-(CF3SO3)( m+n)}, vpy) 4- vinylpyridine, m = 131, n = 131 or m = 200, n = 150, and m + n + p = 600, were investigated in solution phase. The polymers exist in solution as aggregates of polymer strands with radii as large as similar to 10(2) nm. Given the size of the poly-vpy backbone, the aggregates must contain a large number of strands. The luminescence spectrum exhibits a strong resemblance to the emission spectrum of {( vpy-[Re(CO)(3)(phen)]) 200(vpy)(400)}(CF3SO3)(200). The existence of Re(I) chromophores in diverse environments was shown by the intrinsic kinetics of the luminescence, the decay kinetics of the MLCT excited states observed by time resolved-absorption spectroscopy, and the quenching of the luminescence by various quenchers. Redox reactions of the MLCT excited states with the quenchers were responsible for the luminescence quenching. While static quenching resulted when Cu(II) and Fe(III) EDTA complexes were the quenchers, a dynamic quenching resulted with Fe(CN)(6)(4-) or 2,2',2''-triethanolamine, TEOA. The photochemical and photophysical properties of the mixed-pendant polymers have been discussed in terms of arrays of MLCT excited states whose energies are determined by the diverse environments of the Re(I) chromophores. Conversions (with and without radiation) of the upper-energy MLCT excited states to the ground state and lower-energy MLCT excited states and the latter excited state to the ground state account for the experimental results.