Conservation laws, radiative decay rates, and excited state localization in organometallic complexes with strong spin-orbit coupling

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Abstract

There is longstanding fundamental interest in 6-fold coordinated d 6 (t 6 2g) transition metal complexes such as [Ru(bpy) 3 ] 2+ and Ir(ppy) 3, particularly their phosphorescence. This interest has increased with the growing realisation that many of these complexes have potential uses in applications including photovoltaics, imaging, sensing, and light-emitting diodes. In order to design new complexes with properties tailored for specific applications a detailed understanding of the low-energy excited states, particularly the lowest energy triplet state, T 1, is required. Here we describe a model of pseudo-octahedral complexes based on a pseudo-angular momentum representation and show that the predictions of this model are in excellent agreement with experiment - even when the deviations from octahedral symmetry are large. This model gives a natural explanation of zero-field splitting of T 1 and of the relative radiative rates of the three sublevels in terms of the conservation of time-reversal parity and total angular momentum modulo two. We show that the broad parameter regime consistent with the experimental data implies significant localization of the excited state.

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Powell, B. J. (2015). Conservation laws, radiative decay rates, and excited state localization in organometallic complexes with strong spin-orbit coupling. Scientific Reports, 5. https://doi.org/10.1038/srep10815

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