Tunable Linear and Nonlinear Optical Properties from Room Temperature Phosphorescent Cyclic Triimidazole-Pyrene Bio-Probe.
Andrea PrevitaliWei HeAlessandra ForniDaniele MalpicciElena LucentiDaniele MarinottoLucia CarlucciPierluigi MercandelliMarco Aldo OrtenziGiancarlo TerraneoChiara BottaRyan Tsz Kin KwokJacky Wing Yip LamBen-Zhong TangElena CariatiPublished in: Chemistry (Weinheim an der Bergstrasse, Germany) (2021)
Organic materials with multiple emissions tunable by external stimuli represent a great challenge. TTPyr, crystallizing in different polymorphs, shows a very rich photophyisics comprising excitation-dependent fluorescence and phosphorescence at ambient conditions, and mechanochromic and thermochromic behavior. Transformation among the different species has been followed by thermal and X-ray diffraction analyses and the emissive features interpreted through structural results and DFT/TDDFT calculations. Particularly intriguing is the polymorph TTPyr(HT), serendipitously obtained at high temperature but stable also at room temperature, whose non-centrosymmetric structure guarantees an SHG efficiency 10 times higher than that of standard urea. Its crystal packing, where only the TT units are strongly rigidified by π-π stacking interactions while the Pyr moieties possess partial conformational freedom, is responsible for the observed dual fluorescence. The potentialities of TTPyr for bioimaging have been successfully established.
Keyphrases
- room temperature
- energy transfer
- quantum dots
- high temperature
- density functional theory
- molecular dynamics
- single molecule
- light emitting
- molecular dynamics simulations
- living cells
- ionic liquid
- air pollution
- particulate matter
- molecular docking
- high resolution
- electron microscopy
- fluorescent probe
- crystal structure
- computed tomography
- municipal solid waste
- water soluble
- magnetic resonance
- mass spectrometry
- magnetic resonance imaging
- dual energy
- monte carlo