Tuning oxygen-sensing behaviour of a porous coordination framework by a guest fluorophore†
Abstract
Tris(8-hydroxyquinolinato)aluminium (AlQ3), a classic fluorescent molecule insensitive to oxygen, is encapsulated as a guest fluorophore into a highly porous coordination framework [Zn4O(bpz)2(bdc)] (MAF-X10, H2bpz = 3,3′,5,5′-tetramethyl-4,4′-bipyrazole, H2bdc = 1,4-benzenedicarboxylic acid) to obtain a highly luminescent host–guest hybrid material AlQ3@MAF-X10 combining the advantages of excellent fluorescence of AlQ3, high oxygen permeability of MAF-X10, and the resonance energy transfer between AlQ3 and MAF-X10. Photoluminescence studies showed that AlQ3@MAF-X10 exhibits yellowish green fluorescence with a Stokes shift (9606 cm−1) as large as those of phosphorescent noble metal complexes, long lifetime (37.4 ns) and a considerable oxygen permeability (4.4 × 10−9 mol cm−1 s−1 bar−1), giving rise to high oxygen sensitivity (88.5% quenched at 1 bar, i.e., I0/I100 = 8.7, KSV = 7.6 bar−1) with fast response and good reversibility.
- This article is part of the themed collections: 2015 Emerging Investigators by ICF and HOT articles in Inorganic Chemistry Frontiers for 2015