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Tailoring the Solid-State Fluorescence of BODIPY by Supramolecular Assembly with Polyoxometalates.

Patricia BolleTarik BenaliClotilde MenetMarin PugetEric FaulquesJérôme MarrotPierre MialaneAnne DolbecqHélène Serier-BraultOlivier OmsRémi Dessapt
Published in: Inorganic chemistry (2021)
A cationic boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY) derivative (1+) has been successfully combined with two polyoxometalates (POMs), the Lindqvist-type [W6O19]2- and the β-[Mo8O26]4- units, into three new supramolecular fluorescent materials (1)2[W6O19]·2CH3CN, (1)2[W6O19], and (1)4[Mo8O26]·DMF·H2O. The resulting hybrid compounds have been fully characterized by a combination of single-crystal X-ray diffraction, IR and UV-vis spectroscopies, and photoluminescence analyses. This self-assembly approach prevents any π-π stacking interactions not only between the BODIPY units, responsible for aggregation-caused quenching (ACQ) effects, but also between the BODIPY and the POMs, avoiding intermolecular charge-transfer effects. Noticeably, the POM units do not only act as bulky spacers, but their negative charge density drives the molecular arrangement of the 1+ luminophore, strongly modifying its fluorescence in the solid state. As a consequence, the 1+ cations are organized into dimers in (1)2[W6O19]·2CH3CN and (1)2[W6O19], which are weakly emissive at room temperature, and in a more compact layered assembly in (1)4[Mo8O26]·DMF·H2O, which exhibits a red-shifted and intense emission upon similar photoexcitation.
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