Nonradiative Deactivation of Lanthanoid Excited States by Inner-Sphere Carboxylates.
Inorg Chem
; 54(22): 10841-8, 2015 Nov 16.
Article
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| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-26501567
The vibrational deactivation of metal-centered excited states is one of the fundamental processes that governs the luminescence of inorganic luminophores. In molecular lanthanoid luminescence, the most reliable way to modulate and systematically investigate these processes is deuteration of X-H stretching modes (X = O, N, C). Apart from the effect of these high-energy vibrational motifs, very little is known about the impact of other oscillator fragments present in lanthanoid complexes. We have developed a synthetic protocol to efficiently and selectively label the popular chelator motif "pyridine-2-carboxylic acid" with stable (13)C/(18)O isotope at the carboxylate group. The corresponding isotopologic lanthanoid complexes (Ln = Sm, Eu, Ho) show a decrease of the local-mode carbonyl stretching frequency of up to 5% after isotopic substitution. While this does not seems to have any effect on the luminescence of lanthanoids with medium- to high-energy gaps (Sm and Eu), we have found the first example of a quantifiable luminescence isotope effect for one of the near-IR transitions of holmium ((3)K8 â (5)I5) that only involves the isotopic editing of the vibrational environment at the four carbonyl oscillators.
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Colección:
01-internacional
Base de datos:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Inorg Chem
Año:
2015
Tipo del documento:
Article
País de afiliación:
Alemania
Pais de publicación:
Estados Unidos