Publication | Closed Access
Highly Efficient Blue Phosphorescence from Pillar‐Layer MOFs by Ligand Functionalization
164
Citations
45
References
2021
Year
Chemical EngineeringPhosphorescence ImagingTraditional MofsRoom Temperature PhosphorescencePhotochemistryEngineeringCovalent Bonded FrameworkMofs InkPillar‐layer MofsChemistryMolecular EngineeringMetal-organic PolyhedronLuminescence PropertyThermally Activated Delayed FluorescenceFunctional MaterialsPhosphorescence
Room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) has been extensively researched in heavy-metal containing complexes and purely organic systems. Despite the rapid blossom of RTP materials, it is still a tremendous challenge to develop highly efficient blue RTP materials with long-lived lifetimes. Taking the metal-organic framework (MOF) as a model, herein, a feasible strategy of ligand functionalization is proposed, including two essential elements, to develop blue phosphorescence materials with high efficiency and long-lived lifetimes simultaneously under ambient conditions. One is isolation of the chromophores with assistance of another predefined co-ligands, the other is restriction of the chromophores' motions through coordination and host-guest interactions. Remarkably, it renders the MOFs with highly efficient blue phosphorescence up to 80.6% and a lifetime of 169.7 ms under ambient conditions. Moreover, a demo of the crown is fabricated with MOFs ink by 3D printing technique. The potential applications for anti-counterfeiting and fingerprint visualization have been also demonstrated. This finding not only outlines a universal principle to design and synthesize highly efficient RTP materials, but also endows traditional MOFs with fresh vitality for potential applications.
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