Molecular Motions in AIEgen Crystals: Turning on Photoluminescence by Force-Induced Filament Sliding.
Jing ZhangBenzhao HeWenjie WuParvej AlamHan ZhangJunyi GongFengyan SongZaiyu WangHerman H Y SungIan D WilliamsZhiming WangJacky W Y LamBen-Zhong TangPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2020)
Life process is amazing, and it proceeds against the eternal law of entropy increase through molecular motion and takes energy from the environment to build high-order complexity from chaos to achieve evolution with more sophisticated architectures. Inspired from the elegance of life process and also to effectively exploit the undeveloped solid-state molecular motion, two unique chiral Au(I) complexes were elaborately developed in this study, in which their powders could realize a dramatic transformation from nonemissive isolated crystallites to emissive well-defined microcrystals under the stimulation of mechanical force. Such an unusual crystallization was presumed to be caused by molecular motions driven by the formation of strong aurophilic interactions as well as multiple C-H···F and π-π interactions. Such a prominent macroscopic off/on luminescent switching could also be achieved through extremely subtle molecular motions in the crystal state and presented a filament sliding that occurred in a layer-by-layer molecular stacking fashion with no involvement of any crystal phase transition. Additionally, it had been demonstrated that the manipulation of the solid-state molecular motions could result in the generation of circularly polarized luminescence.