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Room-Temperature Delayed Fluorescence of Gold Nanoclusters in Zinc-Mediated Two-Dimensional Crystalline Assembly.

Srestha BasuArun Chattopadhyay
Published in: Langmuir : the ACS journal of surfaces and colloids (2019)
We report that complexation-reaction-mediated two-dimensional crystalline assembly of gold (Au14) nanoclusters (NCs) exhibits room-temperature delayed fluorescence at 605 nm, with an unprecedented long lifetime of 0.5 ms and an exceptionally high quantum yield of 19.1 ± 0.9%. Interestingly, the as-synthesized Au NCs had a very weak delayed fluorescence signal. The enhancement in delayed fluorescence of Au NCs upon formation of assembly has been attributed to the crystallization-induced structural rigidity, which restricted the nonradiative transitions and enhanced the excited-state lifetime. The attainment of crystalline organization was substantiated by electron diffraction analysis. A possible structure was established based on experimental results and computational optimizations. Atomic force microscopy revealed the formation of multilayered two-dimensional nanosheets with thickness of 2.44 ± 0.48 nm.
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