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Lighting up solid states using a rubber.

Zhongyu LiYanjie WangGlib V BaryshnikovShen ShenMan ZhangQi ZouHans ÅgrenLiangliang Zhu
Published in: Nature communications (2021)
It is crucial and desirable to develop green and high-efficient strategies to regulate solid-state structures and their related material properties. However, relative to solution, it is more difficult to break and generate chemical bonds in solid states. In this work, a rubbing-induced photoluminescence on the solid states of ortho-pyridinil phenol family was achieved. This rubbing response relied on an accurately designed topochemical tautomerism, where a negative charge, exactly provided by the triboelectric effect of a rubber, can induce a proton transfer in a double H-bonded dimeric structure. This process instantaneously led to a bright-form tautomer that can be stabilized in the solid-state settings, leading to an up to over 450-fold increase of the fluorescent quantum yield of the materials. The property can be repeatedly used due to the reversibility of the tautomerism, enabling encrypted applications. Moreover, a further modification to the structure can be accomplished to achieve different properties, opening up more possibilities for the design of new-generation smart materials.
Keyphrases
  • solid state
  • quantum dots
  • high resolution
  • molecular dynamics
  • energy transfer
  • oxidative stress
  • mass spectrometry
  • electron transfer
  • monte carlo
  • fluorescent probe