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      Dual phosphorescent dinuclear transition metal complexes, and their application as triplet photosensitizers for TTA upconversion and photodynamic therapy

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          Abstract

          A long-lived dual phosphorescence triplet photosensitiser: for TTA upconversion and PDT.

          Abstract

          Two novel homo Ru( ii) and Ir( iii) complexes ( Ru-2 and Ir-2), containing a bridging boron-dipyrromethene (BODIPY) chromophore were synthesised. The BODIPY moiety was covalently attached to the coordinated bipyridine (bpy) or phenylpyridine (ppy) via two acetylene linkers to produce bimetallic-complexes, which were employed as triplet photosensitizers. Both Ru-2 and Ir-2 absorb strongly in the visible region ( λ abs = 570 nm, ε = 113 317 dm −3 mol −1 cm −1 for Ru-2 and λ abs = 567 nm, ε = 105 713 dm −3 mol −1 cm −1 for Ir-2). Due to a strong intraligand feature, and a small contribution from the metal, to the triplet state, the triplet-state lifetimes are particularly long for both complexes (1316.0 μs for Ru-2, 630.7 μs for Ir-2). High upconversion quantum yields were found (19.1% for Ru-2 and 25.5% for Ir-2). The intermolecular triplet energy transfer between the metal centres were studied using nanosecond time-resolved transient absorption spectroscopy ( Φ TTET = 94% Ru-2 and Φ TTET = 86% Ir-2). Knowing the desirable photophysical properties of the complexes, both were then tested for their application in photodynamic therapy (PDT).

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          Most cited references27

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          Photon upconversion based on sensitized triplet–triplet annihilation

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            Phosphorescent heavy-metal complexes for bioimaging.

            The application of phosphorescent heavy-metal complexes with d(6), d(8) and d(10) electron configurations for bioimaging is a new and promising research field and has been attracting increasing interest. In this critical review, we systematically evaluate the advantages of phosphorescent heavy-metal complexes as bioimaging probes, including their photophysical properties, cytotoxicity and cellular uptake mechanisms. The progress of research into the use of phosphorescent heavy-metal complexes for staining different compartments of cells, monitoring intracellular functional species, providing targeted bioimaging, two-photon bioimaging, small-animal bioimaging, multimodal bioimaging and time-resolved bioimaging is summarized. In addition, several possible future directions in this field are also discussed (133 references).
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              Triplet–triplet annihilation based upconversion: from triplet sensitizers and triplet acceptors to upconversion quantum yields

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                JMCCCX
                Journal of Materials Chemistry C
                J. Mater. Chem. C
                Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
                2050-7526
                2050-7534
                2016
                2016
                : 4
                : 25
                : 6131-6139
                Affiliations
                [1 ]School of Chemistry
                [2 ]University of Dublin
                [3 ]Trinity College
                [4 ]Dublin 2
                [5 ]Ireland
                [6 ]State Key Laboratory of Fine Chemicals
                [7 ]School of Chemical Engineering
                [8 ]Dalian University of Technology
                [9 ]Dalian 116012
                [10 ]P. R. China
                Article
                10.1039/C6TC01926A
                a873b938-a421-4519-bc72-b25ba1226ed8
                © 2016
                History

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