Tunable Ultralong Room Temperature Phosphorescence Based on Zn(II)-Niacin Metal-Organic Complex: Accessible and Low-Cost.
Qing MiaoZheng WangPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2024)
Long persistent luminescence (LPL) materials open up a new avenue for information security, anticounterfeiting technology, and bioimaging thanks to their unique luminescence characteristics like ultralong exciton migration distances and multiple-colored light emission. As materials that have value for commercial applications, they attract much attention. In this paper, inexpensive, accessible, and eco-friendly niacin is used as a ligand to combine with the universally used metal ion Zn(II) to form a crystallized metal-organic complex dubbed Zn-NA. The named material possesses an ultralong room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) with a lifetime of up to 265 ms under the atmosphere and up to 446 ms at 77 K. Notably, it exhibits a bright and multimode (excitation- and temperature-dependent) color-tunable LPL that changes from blue to cyan and then to yellow-green upon removal of the irradiation sources. Depending on its photoluminescence and theoretical calculations, the observed long-lived RTP of Zn-NA can be attributed to the coexistence of a single-molecule state induced by the heavy atom effect and an aggregated state within a dense crystalline structure.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- energy transfer
- light emitting
- low cost
- single molecule
- quantum dots
- heavy metals
- ionic liquid
- mass spectrometry
- living cells
- multiple sclerosis
- molecular dynamics
- ms ms
- minimally invasive
- working memory
- density functional theory
- atomic force microscopy
- drinking water
- radiation therapy
- public health
- social media
- molecular dynamics simulations
- healthcare
- water soluble