Beilstein Journal of Organic Chemistry (May 2020)

Development of fluorinated benzils and bisbenzils as room-temperature phosphorescent molecules

  • Shigeyuki Yamada,
  • Takuya Higashida,
  • Yizhou Wang,
  • Masato Morita,
  • Takuya Hosokai,
  • Kaveendra Maduwantha,
  • Kaveenga Rasika Koswattage,
  • Tsutomu Konno

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3762/bjoc.16.102
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 16, no. 1
pp. 1154 – 1162

Abstract

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Pure organic phosphorescent molecules are attractive alternatives to transition-metal-complex-based phosphores for biomedical and technological applications owing to their abundance and nontoxicity. This article discloses the design, synthesis, and photophysical properties of fluorinated benzil and bisbenzil derivatives as potential pure organic room-temperature phosphorescent molecules. These compounds were separately converted from the corresponding fluorinated bistolanes via PdCl2-catalyzed oxidation by dimethyl sulfoxide, while nonfluorinated bistolane provided the corresponding bisbenzil derivatives exclusively in a similar manner. Intensive investigations of the photophysical properties of the benzil and bisbenzil derivatives in toluene at 25 °C showed both fluorescence with a photoluminescence (PL) band at a maximum wavelength (λPL) of around 400 nm and phosphorescence with a PL band at a λPL of around 560 nm. Interestingly, intersystem crossing effectively caused fluorinated benzils to emit phosphorescence, which may arise from immediate spin-orbit coupling involving the 1(n, π)→3(π, π) transition, unlike the case of fluorinated or nonfluorinated bisbenzil analogues. These findings offer a useful guide for developing novel pure organic room-temperature phosphorescent materials.

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