Metal-Halide Coordination Polymers with Excitation Wavelength- and Time-Dependent Ultralong Room-Temperature Phosphorescence.
Yu-Juan MaZhenhong QiGuowei XiaoXiaoyu FangDongpeng YanPublished in: Inorganic chemistry (2022)
Metal-organic hybrids with ultralong room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) have potential applications in many fields, including optical communications, anticounterfeiting, encryption, bioimaging, and so on. Herein, we report two isostructural one-dimensional zinc-organic halides as coordination polymers ZnX 2 (bpp) (X = Cl, 1 ; Br, 2 ; bpp = 1,3-di(4-pyridyl)propane) with excitation wavelength- and time-dependent ultralong RTP properties. The dynamic multicolor afterglow can be assigned to the emission of the pristine ligand bpp and its interactions with halogen atoms. Experiments and theoretical calculations both suggest that ZnX 2 is crucial for ultralong RTP: (a) the metal coordination and X...π bonds in coordination polymers fix the bpp molecules and suppress the nonradiative transitions; (b) the spin-orbital coupling of coordination polymers is largely enhanced relative to the bpp because of the heavy atom effect; and (c) the charge transfer exists between halogens and bpp ligand. Therefore, this work not only presents metal-halide coordination polymers with excitation wavelength- and time-dependent RTP properties, but also provides a facile method for the new types of dynamic multicolor afterglow materials.
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