| Literature DB >> 30561845 |
Elena Lucenti1, Alessandra Forni1, Chiara Botta2, Clelia Giannini3, Daniele Malpicci3, Daniele Marinotto1, Andrea Previtali3, Stefania Righetto1,3, Elena Cariati1,3.
Abstract
Considering that heavy halogen atoms can be used to tune the emissive properties of organic luminogens, the understanding of their role in photophysics is fundamental for materials engineering. Here, the extrinsic and intrinsic heavy-atom effects on the photophysics of organic crystals were separately evaluated by comparing cyclic triimidazole (TT) with its monoiodo derivative (TTI) and its co-crystal with diiodotetrafluorobenzene (TTCo). Crystals of TT showed room-temperature ultralong phosphorescence (RTUP) originated from H-aggregation. TTI and TTCo displayed two additional long-lived components, the origin of which is elucidated through single-crystal X-ray and DFT/TDDFT studies. The results highlight the different effects of the I atom on the three phosphorescent emissions. Intrinsic heavy-atom effects play a major role on molecular phosphorescence, which is displayed at room temperature only for TTI. The H-aggregate RTUP and the I⋅⋅⋅N XB-induced (XB=halogen bond) phosphorescence on the other side depend only on packing features.Entities:
Keywords: co-crystals; halogen bonding; phosphorescence; photophysics; time-resolved spectroscopy
Year: 2019 PMID: 30561845 DOI: 10.1002/chem.201804980
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chemistry ISSN: 0947-6539 Impact factor: 5.236