Polymorph-Dependent Green, Yellow, and Red Emissions of Organic Crystals for Laser Applications.
Zhenzhen XuZhiwei ZhangXue JinQing LiaoHongbing FuPublished in: Chemistry, an Asian journal (2017)
Color tuning of organic solid-state luminescent materials remains difficult and time-consuming through conventional chemical synthesis. Herein, we reported highly efficient polymorph-dependent green (P1), yellow (P2), and red (P3) emissions of organic crystals made by the same molecular building blocks of 4-(2-{4-[2-(4-diphenylamino-phenyl)-vinyl]-phenyl}-vinyl)-benzonitrile (DOPVB). Single-crystal X-ray diffraction (XRD) and spectroscopic data reveal that all three polymorphs follow the herringbone packing motif in H-type aggregations. On the one hand, from P1, P2 to P3, the reduced pitch translation along π stacks increases the intermolecular interactions between adjacent molecules, therefore leading to gradually red-shifted emissions from 540, 570 to 614 nm. On the other hand, the edge-to-face arrangement and large roll translations avoid strong π-π overlap, making P1, P2 and P3 highly emissive with record-high solid-state fluorescence quantum yields of 0.60, 0.98, and 0.68, respectively. Furthermore, the optically allowed 0-1 transitions of herringbone H-aggregates of P1, P2 and P3 naturally provide a four-level scheme, enabling green and yellow amplified spontaneous emissions (ASE) with very low thresholds.
Keyphrases
- solid state
- highly efficient
- municipal solid waste
- energy transfer
- life cycle
- water soluble
- single molecule
- room temperature
- high resolution
- photodynamic therapy
- molecular docking
- electronic health record
- big data
- sensitive detection
- light emitting
- magnetic resonance
- single cell
- image quality
- genome wide
- artificial intelligence
- molecular dynamics simulations