| Literature DB >> 31588325 |
Zhi-Yuan Zhang1, Yu Liu1.
Abstract
Long-lived organic room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) has received great attention because of its various potential applications. Herein, we report a persistent RTP of a solid-state supramolecule between a cucurbit[6]uril (CB[6]) host and a heavy-atom-free phenylmethylpyridinium guest. Significantly, the long-lived phosphorescence completely depends on the host-guest complexation, revealing that the non-phosphorescent guest exhibits a 2.62 s ultralong lifetime after being complexed by CB[6] under ambient conditions. The ultralong RTP is because of tight encapsulation of CB[6], which boosts intersystem crossing, suppresses nonradiative relaxation and possibly shields quenchers. Moreover, several phosphorescent complexes possessing different lifetimes are prepared and successfully applied in triple lifetime-encoding for data encryption and anti-counterfeiting. This strategy provides a new insight for realizing purely organic RTP with ultralong lifetime and expands its application in the field of information protection. This journal is © The Royal Society of Chemistry 2019.Entities:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31588325 PMCID: PMC6764277 DOI: 10.1039/c9sc02633a
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Chem Sci ISSN: 2041-6520 Impact factor: 9.825
Scheme 1Schematic illustration of the solid-state supramolecular strategy and Jablonski diagram for radiative and non-radiative processes. (KFluor is the radiative rate constant of the lowest excited singlet state S1; KFluonr is the nonradiative rate constant of the lowest excited singlet S1; Kisc is the intersystem crossing rate constant from the excited singlet state to the triplet state; KPhosr is the radiative rate constant of the lowest excited triplet state T1; KPhosnr is the nonradiative rate constant of the lowest excited triplet state T1; τPhos is the lifetime of the excited triplet state; ΦPhos is the quantum yield of phosphorescence; and Φisc is the quantum yield of intersystem crossing from the excited singlet state to the triplet state; inset: the molecular structures of the guests and host).
Fig. 1Photophysical properties of PX/CB[6]. (a) Excitation (black), photoluminescence (magenta) and phosphorescence spectra (olive) of PBC/CB[6] in the solid state; (b) time resolved PL decay of PBC/CB[6] at 510 nm in the solid state at room temperature; (c) luminescence photographs of PBC/CB[6] and PCC/CB[6] powder under 365 nm UV irradiation and at different time intervals after removal of the ultraviolet lamp.
Photophysical data of PX/CB[6]
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| PBC/CB[6] | 366 | 427 | 510 | 8.40 | 2620 | 17.3 | 9.7 | 2.1 × 107 | 8.7 × 107 | 1.2 × 107 | 3.7 × 10–2 | 0.34 |
| PFC/CB[6] | 330 | 434 | 520 | 5.61 | 0.0095 | 27.7 | 1.9 | 4.9 × 107 | 1.2 × 108 | 1.4 × 107 | 2.0 × 103 | 1.0 × 105 |
| PCC/CB[6] | 370 | 420 | 500 | 2.52 | 275 | 41.8 | 26.7 | 1.6 × 108 | 1.2 × 108 | 1.1 × 108 | 0.97 | 2.7 |
| PYCl/CB[6] | 334 | 388 | 500 | 3.62 | 5.40 | 3.7 | 81.2 | 1.0 × 107 | 4.2 × 107 | 2.2 × 108 | 150 | 34.8 |
| PIC/CB[6] | 407 | 477 | 575 | 1.53 | 1.40 | 2.6 | 3.9 | 1.7 × 107 | 6.1 × 108 | 2.5 × 107 | 27.9 | 6.9 × 102 |
| PEC/CB[6] | 429 | 494 | — | 7.52 | — | 4.34 | — | 5.8 × 106 | 1.3 × 108 | — | — | — |
| PC/CB[6] | 250 | 494 | — | 23.14 | — | 2.60 | — | 1.1 × 106 | 4.2 × 107 | — | — | — |
The radiative decay rate constant of fluorescence KFluor = ΦFluo/τFluo.
The nonradiative decay rate constant of fluorescence KFluonr = (1 – ΦFluo – ΦPhos)/τFluo.
The intersystem crossing rate constant Kisc = ΦPhos/τFluo.
The radiative decay rate constant of phosphorescence KPhosr = ΦPhos/τPhos.
The nonradiative decay rate constant of phosphorescence KPhosnr = (1 – ΦPhos)/τPhos.
Not detected.
Not calculated.
Fig. 2(a) 1H NMR spectra of PBC/CB[6] and PBC; (b) high resolution mass spectrometry of PBC/CB[6]; (c) XRD patterns of PBC/CB[6] (wine) and PYCl/CB[6] (black); (d) phosphorescence quantum yield (Φp) and lifetime (τ) of PX/CB[6].
Fig. 3Schematic illustration of lifetime-encoding for security applications using PYCl/CB[6], PCC/CB[6] and PBC/CB[6].