| Literature DB >> 29780510 |
Yingxiao Mu1, Zhiyong Yang1, Junru Chen1, Zhan Yang1, Wenlang Li1, Xianbao Tan1, Zhu Mao1, Tao Yu1, Juan Zhao1, Shizhao Zheng1, Siwei Liu1, Yi Zhang1, Zhenguo Chi1, Jiarui Xu1, Matthew P Aldred2.
Abstract
The persistent room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) of purely organic materials in the solid state has recently attracted much research interest and found promising, rapid and visual applications by the naked eye, after the removal of the excitation source. However, almost all reported organic persistent RTP processes are induced by using a UV-light irradiation source. In this report, persistent RTP with an emission lifetime as long as 0.15 s which can be induced not only by photoirradiation but also by mechanical action is presented, which merges mechano-induced luminescence and persistent RTP together. It is found that such persistent RTP is produced through intermolecular electronic coupling (IEC) of units with different excited state configurations. Interestingly, there are two different crystals with and without mechano-induced persistent RTP which can be grown from this organic material, as such a new type of mechano-luminescence (ML) is strongly dependent on their intermolecular interactions. Furthermore, the intensity of such mechano-induced persistent RTP can be increased by lowing the temperature as well, similar to that of photo-induced persistent RTP. Notably, these two crystals exhibit a ML enhancement and ML "turn on", respectively, with decreasing temperature. Therefore, such mechano-induced persistent RTP provides an example of new types of organic luminescent materials, which is a missing jigsaw piece of organic luminescence and important for both fundamental research and practical applications of both persistent RTP and ML of organic materials.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29780510 PMCID: PMC5939606 DOI: 10.1039/c8sc00429c
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Fig. 1Schematic diagram of the intermolecular electronic coupling in the crystalline state for persistent RTP: (left) chemical structure of the compound CX, (above right) intermolecular n- and π-units stacked in the crystal, and (below right) hybrid intersystem crossing formation. = the ground state, = the lowest singlet excited state, and = the lowest triplet excited state. All these states refer to the proposed intermolecular electronically coupled states.
Fig. 2(a) Time-resolved emission decay curves of CX under different conditions: CX49 crystal (545 nm), CX11 crystal (545 nm, 77 K) and in toluene solution (485 nm, 10–5 M, 77 K, top coordinate). Inset photos are the CX49 crystal sample before (on) and after (off) the UV-light exposure removal. (b) Comparison of the powder X-ray diffraction spectra of CX49 and CX11 crystals, and the simulated spectrum from the CX11 single crystal. (c) Steady-state photoluminescence (PL) spectra and phosphorescence spectra (Ph, delayed 8 ms) of CX in toluene solution (10–5 M) and the crystalline (CX49) state. The spectra were recorded at room-temperature unless otherwise stated. (d) Steady-state PL spectra and Ph spectra (delayed 8 ms) of CX11 and CX49 crystals at 77 K.
Fig. 4Comparison of the phosphorescence (Ph) and mechano-luminescence (ML) spectra of (a) CX49 and (b) CX11 crystals at 300 and 77 K. (c) ML photos of the CX49 crystal at 77 K, showing mechano-induced persistent phosphorescence.
Fig. 3(a) Intermolecular interactions of the XTO and Cz groups in two neighboring CX molecules in the CX11 single crystal. The distances from the atoms (A, B and C) in the XTO group to the electronically coupled Cz plane are indicated by green dashed lines: (A) 3.323 Å, (B) 3.370 Å and (C) 3.699 Å. The twist angle between the XTO and Cz groups of the CX molecule is indicated as well. (b) Schematic representations of the TD-DFT calculated energy levels, main orbital configurations and possible ISC channels of coupled CX in the CX11 single crystal in the singlet (S1) and triplet (T) states. The notations H and L refer to the HOMO and LUMO, respectively. The plain arrows and dashed arrows refer to the major and minor ISC channels, respectively. (c–e) The Kohn–Sham frontier orbitals that are involved in the probable ISC channel obtained from the electronically coupled CX molecules in the CX11 crystal.