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Two‐Dimensional Metal‐Organic Layers as a Bright and Processable Phosphor for Fast White‐Light Communication

53

Citations

30

References

2017

Year

Abstract

A metal-organic layer (MOL) is a new type of 2D material that is derived from metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) by reducing one dimension to a single layer or a few layers. Tetraphenylethylene-based tetracarboxylate ligands (TCBPE), with aggregation-induced emission properties, were assembled into the first luminescent MOL by linking with Zr<sub>6</sub> O<sub>4</sub> (OH)<sub>6</sub> (H<sub>2</sub> O)<sub>2</sub> (HCO<sub>2</sub> )<sub>6</sub> clusters. The emissive MOL can replace the lanthanide phosphors in white light emitting diodes (WLEDs) with remarkable processability, color rendering, and brightness. Importantly, the MOL-WLED exhibited a physical switching speed three times that of commercial WLEDs, which is crucial for visible-light communication (VLC), an alternative wireless communication technology to Wi-Fi and Bluetooth, by using room lighting to carry transmitted signals. The short fluorescence lifetime (2.6 ns) together with high quantum yield (50 %) of the MOL affords fast switching of the assembled WLEDs for efficient information encoding and transmission.

References

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