Publication | Open Access
Luminogenic materials constructed from tetraphenylethene building blocks: Synthesis, aggregation-induced emission, two-photon absorption, light refraction, and explosive detection
236
Citations
50
References
2011
Year
Optical MaterialsEngineeringTetraphenylethene Building BlocksChemistryLuminescence PropertyAggregation-enhanced Two-photonPolymersLight RefractionLuminogenic MoleculesOptical PropertiesThermally Activated Delayed FluorescencePhotophysical PropertyMaterials SciencePhotoluminescencePhotochemistryExplosive DetectionBiomolecular EngineeringLuminogenic MaterialsOptoelectronics
Luminogenic molecules [(TPE)3 (1), TPE-C = C-TPE-C = C-TPE (2), and TPE-C≡C-TPE-C≡C-TPE (3)] and their polymers P1–P3 are constructed from tetraphenylethene (TPE) building blocks in high yields by Suzuki, Witting, and Sonogashira coupling reactions. All the compounds are soluble and enjoy high thermal stability, losing little of their weights when they are heated to 290–528 °C under nitrogen or 288–436 °C in air. Analyses by UV spectroscopy and cyclic voltammetry as well as theoretical calculations show that the conjugation of the luminophores is in the order of 2 > 3 > 1, P2 > P3 > P1, and P1–P3 > 1–3. All the molecules and polymers are weakly emissive in solutions. They, however, become strong emitters in the aggregate state with fluorescence quantum yields up to 90%. Both 1–3 and P1–P3 exhibit the feature of aggregation-enhanced two-photon excited fluorescence. Large two-photon absorption cross sections (up to ∼900 GM) are observed in the nanoaggregates of the polymers. Thin solid films of the polymers show high refractive indices (RI = 1.7649 − 1.6873) in a wide wavelength region of 400–1700 nm, high modified Abbé numbers (vD′ up to 3436), and low optical dispersions (D′ down to 2.9 × 10−4). The light emissions of the polymers can be quenched exponentially by picric acid with large quenching constants, suggesting that they can be utilized as efficient chemosensors for explosive detection.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1