Structural Control of Metal-Centered Excited States in Cobalt(III) Complexes via Bite Angle and π–π Interactions
Polina Yaltseva, Tamar Maisuradze, Alessandro Prescimone, Stephan Kupfer, Oliver S. Wenger
Abstract
High Resolution Image Download MS PowerPoint Slide Co III complexes have recently become an important focus in photophysics and photoredox catalysis due to metal-centered excited states with strong oxidizing properties. Optimizing chelate ligand bite angles is a widely used strategy to strengthen metal–ligand interactions in coordination complexes, with the resulting enhanced ligand fields often contributing to extended excited-state lifetimes that are advantageous for photochemical applications. We demonstrate that bite-angle optimization exerts the opposite effect on Co III polypyridines compared to previously studied transition metal complexes, as polypyridine ligands function as π-donors to Co III rather than π-acceptors. Our findings reveal two counterintuitive paradigms: while bite-angle optimization weakens the ligand field in Co III complexes, the resulting lower-energy metal-centered excited states can be accompanied by extended excited-state lifetimes, driven by increased rigidification through intramolecular π–π interactions. These insights, along with additional experiments investigating the possibility of photoreactions from higher excited states, advance the current understanding of the photophysics and photochemistry of first-row transition metal complexes and highlight key distinctions from the more extensively studied photoactive complexes of second- and third-row transition metals.