Luminescent Ruthenium Complexes for Photoreactions
Luminescent ruthenium complexes offer a number of advantages over conventional dyes such as
- Easy design of luminescent properties, redox reactivity, lipophilicity/solubility and electric charge
- Very long lifetimes of luminescence of up to 1 µs
- Large stokes shifts of more than 150 nm
Complexes with desired properties can be easily obtained by complexation of a building block with a ligand under mild conditions in aqueous environment and without the need for special laboratory equipment. For example, building block Cat.# FP-421 in combination with ligand Cat.# FP-434 generates a complex with an emission wavelength of approximately 700 nm, whereas its combination with ligand Cat.# FP-433 results in emission at 610 nm [7].

Building Blocks
Ruthenium complexes acting as building blocks for the synthesis of custom made dyesLigands
Corresponding ligands for adjusting chemical and photophysical features of the dyesSelected References
[1] Friedman et al. (1990) Molecular "Light Switch" for DNA: Ru(bpy)2(dppz)2+. J. Am. Chem. Soc. 112:4960[2] Terpetschnig et al. (1995) Metal-ligand complexes as a new class of long-lived fluorophores for protein hydrodynamics. Biophys. J. 68 (1):342
[3] Weh et al. (2007) A Resonance Energy Transfer Immunoassay Based on a Thiol-Reactive Ruthenium Donor Dye and a Longwave-Emitting Acceptor. ChemBioChem 8:122
[4] McEvoy et al. (1996) Dissolved oxygen sensor based on fluorescence quenching of oxygen-sensitive ruthenium complexes immobilized in sol–gel-derived porous silica coatings. Analyst 121:785
[5] Esswein et al. (2007) Hydrogen Production by Molecular Photocatalysis. Chem. Rev. 107:4022
[6] Hagfeldt et al. (2000) Molecular Photovoltaics. Acc. Chem. Res. 33:269
[7] Schwalbe et al. (2008) Synthesis and characterisation of poly(bipyridine)ruthenium complexes as building blocks for heterosupramolecular arrays. Eur. J. Inorg. Chem. 21:3310

