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Visualizing Material Processing via Photoexcitation-Controlled Organic-Phase Aggregation-Induced Emission.

Jian GuBingbing YueGlib V BaryshnikovZhongyu LiMan ZhangShen ShenHans ÅgrenLiangliang Zhu
Published in: Research (Washington, D.C.) (2021)
Aggregation-induced emission (AIE) has been much employed for visualizing material aggregation and self-assembly. However, water is generally required for the preparation of the AIE aggregates, the operation of which limits numerous material processing behaviors. Employing hexathiobenzene-based small molecules, monopolymers, and block copolymers as different material prototypes, we herein achieve AIE in pure organic phases by applying a nonequilibrium strategy, photoexcitation-controlled aggregation. This strategy enabled a dynamic change of molecular conformation rather than chemical structure upon irradiation, leading to a continuous aggregation-dependent luminescent enhancement (up to ~200-fold increase of the luminescent quantum yield) in organic solvents. Accompanied by the materialization of the nonequilibrium strategy, photoconvertible self-assemblies with a steady-state characteristic can be achieved upon organic solvent processing. The visual monitoring with the luminescence change covered the whole solution-to-film transition, as well as the in situ photoprocessing of the solid-state materials.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • living cells
  • quantum dots
  • fluorescent probe
  • water soluble
  • energy transfer
  • ionic liquid
  • single molecule
  • molecular dynamics
  • radiation therapy
  • radiation induced
  • crystal structure
  • solid phase extraction