The Delayed Box: Biphenyl Bisimide Cyclophane, a Supramolecular Nano-environment for the Efficient Generation of Delayed Fluorescence.
Swadhin GarainKazutaka ShoyamaLea-Marleen GinderMenyhárt-Botond SárosiFrank WürthnerPublished in: Journal of the American Chemical Society (2024)
Activating delayed fluorescence emission in a dilute solution via a non-covalent approach is a formidable challenge. In this report, we propose a strategy for efficient delayed fluorescence generation in dilute solution using a non-covalent approach via supramolecularly engineered cyclophane-based nanoenvironments that provide sufficient binding strength to π-conjugated guests and that can stabilize triplet excitons by reducing vibrational dissipation and lowering the singlet-triplet energy gap for efficient delayed fluorescence emission. Toward this goal, a novel biphenyl bisimide-derived cyclophane is introduced as an electron-deficient and efficient triplet-generating host. Upon encapsulation of various carbazole-derived guests inside the nanocavity of this cyclophane, emissive charge transfer (CT) states close to the triplet energy level of the biphenyl bisimide are generated. The experimental results of host-guest studies manifest high association constants up to 10 4 M -1 as the prerequisite for inclusion complex formation, the generation of emissive CT states, and triplet-state stabilization in a diluted solution state. By means of different carbazole guest molecules, we could realize tunable delayed fluorescence emission in this carbazole-encapsulated biphenyl bisimide cyclophane in methylcyclohexane/carbon tetrachloride solutions with a quantum yield (QY) of up to 15.6%. Crystal structure analyses and solid-state photophysical studies validate the conclusions from our solution studies and provide insights into the delayed fluorescence emission mechanism.
Keyphrases
- energy transfer
- solid state
- quantum dots
- computed tomography
- single molecule
- crystal structure
- image quality
- magnetic resonance imaging
- signaling pathway
- transcription factor
- case control
- contrast enhanced
- magnetic resonance
- dual energy
- positron emission tomography
- pet ct
- liver injury
- molecular dynamics
- water soluble
- drug induced