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Organic radicals are attracting increasing interest as a new class of molecular emitters. They demonstrate electronic excitation and relaxation dynamics based on their doublet or higher multiplet spin states, which are different from those based on singlet-triplet manifolds of conventional closed-shell molecules. Recent studies have disclosed luminescence properties and excited state dynamics unique to radicals, such as highly efficient electron-photon conversion in OLEDs, NIR emission, magnetoluminescence, an absence of heavy atom effect, and spin-dependent and spin-selective dynamics. These are difficult or sometimes impossible to achieve with closed-shell luminophores. This review focuses on luminescent organic radicals as an emerging photofunctional molecular system, and introduces the material developments, fundamental properties including luminescence, and photofunctions. Materials covered in this review range from monoradicals, radical oligomers, and radical polymers to metal complexes with radical ligands demonstrating radical-involved emission. In addition to stable radicals, transiently formed radicals generated in situ by external stimuli are introduced. This review shows that luminescent organic radicals have great potential to expand the chemical and spin spaces of luminescent molecular materials and thus broaden their applicability to photofunctional systems.
RESUMO
Correction for 'Dinuclear cobalt complexes with a redox active biphenyl bridging ligand [Co2(BP)(tqa)2](PF6)2 (H4BP = 4,4'-bis(3-tert-butyl-1,2-catechol), tqa = tris(2-quinolylmethyl)amine): structure and magnetic properties' by Yusaku Suenaga et al., Dalton Trans., 2021, DOI: .
RESUMO
The biscatechol, H4BP (4,4'-bis(3-tert-butyl-1,2-catechol)) that can directly connect two redox active catechol moieties was synthesized. Also, tris(2-pyridylmethyl)amine (tpa), bis(2-pyridylmethyl)(2-quinolylmethyl)amine (bpqa), (2-pyridylmethyl)bis(2-quinolyl methyl)amine (pbqa), and tris (2-quinolylmethyl)amine (tqa) were synthesized as terminal ligands of the tetracoordinated tripod. In total, five different dinuclear Co complexes were synthesized from H4BP with various terminal ligands as follows, [Co2(BP)(tpa)2](PF6)2 (1), [Co2(BP)(tpa)2](PF6)3 (2), [Co2(BP)(bpqa)2](PF6)2 (3), [Co2(BP)(pbqa)2](PF6)2 (4), and [Co2(BP)(tqa)2](PF6)2 (5). After a one-electron oxidation reaction of complex (1), complex (2), was isolated as a mixed valence state lsCoIII-[SQ-Cat]-lsCoIII, with an absorption intensity of about 1370 nm (intervalence charge transfer (IVCT) bands) in CH3CN solution. In addition, an investigation of the magnetic properties of the dinuclear Co complex (3) with SQUID showed that the χMT value gradually increased as the temperature increased from 280 to 380 K. Studies in the solid and solution states using electronic spectra, cyclic voltammetry and SQUID for the above complexes provide clear evidence for three different charge distributions: complexes (1) and (3) are CoIII-[Cat-Cat]-CoIII, complex (2) is CoIII-[Sq-Cat]-CoIII, complexes (4) and (5) are CoII-[Sq-Sq]-CoII. Of the five cobalt dinuclear complexes, only complex (3) shows evidence of the temperature dependence of the charge distribution, displaying a thermally induced valence tautomeric transition from the lsCoIII-[Cat-Cat]-lsCoIII to hsCoII-[Sq-Sq]-hsCoII in both solid and solution states. However, this valence tautomeric step is incomplete at 380 K, with the χMT value of hsCoII-[Sq-Sq]-hsCoII. This suggests that the steric hindrance of the quinolyl rings around the Co ion produces a coordination atmosphere that is weaker than that observed with pyridyl rings, which facilitates a change in the CoIII ions to CoII.