Issue 26, 2015

Porosity-induced emission: exploring color-controllable fluorescence of porous organic polymers and their chemical sensing applications

Abstract

Most organic dyes dissipate their excitation energy in the aggregated state because of the “aggregation-caused quenching” effect, deteriorating their application in optoelectronic devices. To prevent the “aggregation-caused quenching” effect, we incorporate a dye-based fluorophore into a porous organic polymer skeleton because porosity would allow the spatial isolation of fluorophores to maintain their emission. Tuning the fraction of fluorophores in the skeleton of FL-SNW-DPPs could spread the emission color coverage from red to blue in both solid-state and suspension. More importantly, the combination of fluorescence and porosity of FL-SNW-DPPs would provide more space to transduce the molecular interaction between adsorbed analytes and fluorophores to the detectable changes in light emission, leading to the fluorescence-off or fluorescence-on detection of electron-deficient or electron-rich analytes.

Graphical abstract: Porosity-induced emission: exploring color-controllable fluorescence of porous organic polymers and their chemical sensing applications

Supplementary files

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
10 Mar 2015
Accepted
26 May 2015
First published
26 May 2015

J. Mater. Chem. C, 2015,3, 6876-6881

Porosity-induced emission: exploring color-controllable fluorescence of porous organic polymers and their chemical sensing applications

Y. Li, S. Bi, F. Liu, S. Wu, J. Hu, L. Wang, H. Liu and Y. Hu, J. Mater. Chem. C, 2015, 3, 6876 DOI: 10.1039/C5TC00682A

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