High performance optical oxygen sensors based on iridium complexes exhibiting interchromophore energy shuttling

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Abstract

A doubly pyrene-grafted bis-cyclometallated iridium complex with engineered electronically excited states demonstrates reversible electronic energy transfer between adjacent chromophores giving rise to extremely long-lived red luminescence in solution (τ = 480 μs). Time-resolved spectroscopic studies afforded determination of pertinent photophysical parameters including rates of energy transfer and energy distribution between constituent chromophores in the equilibrated excited molecule (ca. 98% on the organic chromophores). Incorporation into a nanostructured metal-oxide matrix (AP200/19) gave highly sensitive O2 sensing films, as the detection sensitivity was 200-300% higher than with the commonly used PtTFPP and approaches the sensitivity of the best O2-sensing dyes reported to date.

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APA

Medina-Rodríguez, S., Denisov, S. A., Cudré, Y., Male, L., Marín-Suárez, M., Fernández-Gutiérrez, A., … Baranoff, E. (2016). High performance optical oxygen sensors based on iridium complexes exhibiting interchromophore energy shuttling. Analyst, 141(10), 3090–3097. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6an00497k

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