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Intermolecular Charge-Transfer Luminescence by Self-Assembly of Pyridinium Luminophores in Solutions.

Kaspars LeduskrastsEdgars Suna
Published in: ChemistryOpen (2021)
Designing a luminophore for application both in solution and in the solid state is a highly challenging task given the distinct nature of intermolecular interactions in these phases. In this context, we demonstrate that self-assembly of non-emissive charged pyridinium luminophores enables luminescence in solutions through a mechanism that is characteristic for the crystal state. Specifically, protonation of pyridine luminophore subunits in a solution promotes oligomer formation through intermolecular π + -π interactions, leading to an intermolecular charge-transfer type luminescence. The luminescence turn-on by protonation is utilized for a highly efficient solution-state luminescent sensing of hydrogen chloride and sulfonic acids (TfOH, TsOH and MsOH) with detection limits spanning the range from 0.06 to 0.33 ppm. The protonation followed by self-assembly results in a bathochromic shift of the emission from 420 nm to 550 nm.
Keyphrases
  • energy transfer
  • solid state
  • highly efficient
  • quantum dots
  • light emitting
  • photodynamic therapy
  • sensitive detection
  • living cells