4.7 Article

Cubane Dimerization: Cu4 vs Cu8 Copper Iodide Clusters

Journal

INORGANIC CHEMISTRY
Volume 62, Issue 44, Pages 18157-18171

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.inorgchem.3c02634

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Copper(I) halides are promising materials for solid-state lighting technology due to their structural diversity and rich photoluminescence properties. The influence of dimerization and ligand nature on the photophysical properties of copper iodide clusters was investigated. It was found that the nature of the ligand has a greater impact on the properties than the nuclearity of the clusters, highlighting the importance of ligand design in material development for specific lighting applications.
Copper-(I) halides are well-known for their structural diversity and rich photoluminescence properties, showing great potential for the development of solid-state lighting technology. A series of four molecular copper iodide clusters based on the [Cu4I4] cubane geometry is reported. Among them, [Cu8I8] octanuclear clusters of rare geometry resulting from dimerization of the tetranuclear counterparts were also synthesized. Two different phosphine ligands were studied, bearing either a styrene or an ethyl group. Therefore, the effect of the dimerization and of the ligand nature on the photophysical properties of the resulting clusters is investigated. The structural differences were analyzed by single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD), solid-state nuclear magnetic resonance (NMR), infrared, and Raman analyses. Compared to the ethyl group, the styrene function appears to greatly impact the photophysical properties of the clusters. The luminescence thermochromic properties of the ethyl derivatives and the intriguing photophysical properties of the clusters with styrene function were rationalized by density functional theory (DFT) calculations. Thus, the styrene group significantly lowers in energy the vacant orbitals and consequently affects the global energetic layout of the clusters. From this study, it was found that the nuclearity of copper iodide clusters eventually has less influence on the photophysical properties than the nature of the ligand. The design of proper ligands should therefore be considered when developing materials for specific lighting applications.

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