Junming
Xia
a,
Chenchen
Xiong
a,
Songmin
Mo
b,
Yongfeng
Zhang
a,
Kai
Zhang
a,
Gengchen
Li
a,
Jianbing
Shi
a,
Junge
Zhi
c,
Bin
Tong
a,
Qinghe
Wu
*b,
Peng
Sun
*d,
Zhengxu
Cai
*ae and
Yuping
Dong
a
aBeijing Key Laboratory of Construction Tailorable Advanced Functional Materials and Green Applications, School of Materials Science and Engineering, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing 100081, China. E-mail: caizx@bit.edu.cn
bDepartment of Chemistry and Key (Guangdong-Hong Kong Joint) Laboratory for Preparation and Application of Ordered Structural Materials of Guangdong, Shantou University, Shantou, Guangdong 515063, China. E-mail: wuqh@stu.edu.cn
cKey Laboratory of Cluster Science of Ministry of Education, School of Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing 100081, China
dAdvanced Research Institute of Multidisciplinary Science, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing 100081, China. E-mail: sunpeng@bit.edu.cn
eTangshan Research Institute, Beijing Institute of Technology, Beijing 100081, China
First published on 3rd June 2024
Achieving high-performance circularly polarized organic room temperature phosphorescence (CPRTP) holds significant academic and industrial importance. Herein, a series of near-infrared, color-tunable, and long-lived CPRTP materials have been successfully constructed by doping achiral luminescent guests into chiral crystallizable hosts. Naphthalimide derivatives are chosen as the guest molecules owing to the large conjugation and good structure tunability. (−)-Di-p-toluoyl-L- and (+)-di-p-toluoyl-D-tartaric acid are selected as the host molecules on account of the outstanding chirality and crystallinity. Through doping naphthalimide into tartaric acid derivatives, the resultant materials show the desirable CPRTP with a luminescence dissymmetry factor equal to 1.14 × 10−2. The host stabilizes and protects triplet excitons generated from the guest and induces the chirality of phosphorescence. Impressively, the doping material is emissive in the near-infrared region of 720 nm, which has hardly been achieved before. By modifying the chemical structure of the guest, the phosphorescent color of doping materials can be well-modulated from green to yellow and red. Moreover, the doping material displays a lifetime of up to 2.14 s. It is highly anticipated that this work will provide a new design strategy for high-performance CPRTP materials.
Organic near-infrared luminescent materials are known as organic molecules or polymeric materials with emission wavelengths ranging from 700 to 2500 nm.28–31 RTP materials exhibit a large Stokes shift, which endows them with inherent advantages in the construction of near-infrared luminescent materials.32–35 However, the relatively high energy level of the excited state, inefficient intersystem crossing process (ISC) and the instability of triplet excitons always result in serious challenges in developing RTP materials with near-infrared emission.36,37 Through rational molecular design principle such as enlarging the conjugation, the energy levels of the triplet excited state have been significantly lowered.38,39 By introducing heavy atoms, heteroatoms, and carbonyl groups, the ISC process can be greatly enhanced on account of the spin–orbit coupling (SOC) effect.40 Meanwhile, through host–guest doping, crystallization, and supramolecular self-assembly, the generated triplet excitons with low excited energy can be stabilized from non-radiative relaxation and protected from reactants effectively.41,42 To date, research on organic near-infrared RTP materials mainly focuses on extending the emission wavelengths, increasing exciton lifetimes, and improving luminescence efficiency.43–45 Explorations of organic near-infrared RTP materials with circularly polarized emission have rarely been well investigated. The circularly polarized luminescence characteristic contributes to extending the applications of near-infrared RTP materials to information security, biological imaging, and three-dimensional displays.46–52 Therefore, the development of near-infrared CPRTP materials is in urgent and substantial demand.
In this work, near-infrared CPRTP materials were constructed through doping the achiral guest molecules with near-infrared phosphorescence emission into the chiral host molecules with excellent crystallinity. To realize CPRTP with long emission wavelength, the guest molecule should not only have strong abilities of absorbing photons and generating triplet excitons but also possess large conjugation structures.53–57 As shown in Scheme 1a, six naphthalimide derivatives, denoted as NI-I, NI-II, NDI, NDI-Br, NTI, and NTI-Br, respectively, are designed, synthesized and chosen as the achiral guest molecules.58 The large conjugation between benzene rings, benzene rings and carbonyl groups, and carbonyl groups and nitrogen atoms, endows naphthalimide derivatives with a good photon absorbing ability and exciton generating ability, and a low energy gap.43,59 Meanwhile, bromine heavy atoms, carbonyl groups, and heteroatoms like nitrogen and sulfur enhance the ISC process on account of the spin-orbital coupling and heavy atom effect.60,61 (−)-Di-p-toluoyl-L- and (+)-di-p-toluoyl-D-tartaric acid (L-DTA and D-DTA) are a pair of enantiomers and are selected as the chiral host molecules to realize near-infrared CPRTP. Both L- and D-DTA possess excellent crystallinity, which contributes to stabilizing and protecting triplet excitons. More importantly, L- and D-DTA can potentially induce the chirality of phosphorescence because of their enantiomer nature (Scheme 1b). After doping naphthalimide derivatives into DTA, the resultant materials are endowed with the desirable RTP with a luminescence dissymmetry factor (glum) of 1.14 × 10−2. More importantly, the emission wavelength of the doping material reaches as long as a near-infrared region of 720 nm, which is difficult to be achieved in previous studies. The emission color can be well-modulated from green to yellow and red by changing the guest molecule. In addition, the lifetime of host–guest doping materials can extend up to 2.14 s at maximum. Therefore, a series of CPRTP materials with near-infrared emission, color-tunability, and long lifetime are successfully constructed via doping achiral naphthalimide derivative guest molecules into chiral DTA host molecules.
To further study the photophysical properties of naphthalimide derivatives, the lifetime of their cryogenic phosphorescence was evaluated. As shown in Fig. 1d–f, the phosphorescence lifetimes of NI-I, NI-II, NDI, NDI-Br, NTI, and NTI-Br at 77 K are 2.35 s, 445.81, 59.64, 1.73, 69.57, and 2.45 ms, respectively. Compared with naphthalimide derivatives without bromine atoms, NDI-Br and NTI-Br have a relatively short phosphorescence lifetime. On the one hand, the introduction of bromine atoms contributes to enhancing the ISC process owing to the heavy atom effect. On the other hand, the incorporation of bromine atoms accelerates phosphorescence radiation decay rates, which results in a sharp decrease in the phosphorescence lifetime. Therefore, all of these results confirm that the naphthalimide derivative guest molecule with the ability to emit near-infrared phosphorescence is successfully constructed.
Density functional theory and SOC constant calculations of the naphthalimide derivatives were conducted to theoretically investigate their emission properties. As shown in Fig. 2, the electron clouds of the highest occupied and the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital are well-distributed over the entire backbone of the naphthalimide derivative, indicating a strong electron delocalization of the guest molecules. The calculated energy of the triplet excited state of NI-II and NDI decreases from 2.58 to 2.27 eV, and that of NI-II and NTI decreases from 2.58 to 2.21 eV, which result from the enlarging of conjugation by introducing the carbonyl groups, double bonds, and heteroatoms. Molecules with a narrow energy gap between the lowest triplet excited state (T1) and the ground state (S0) always show phosphorescence emission with long-wavelength, and these theoretical calculation results are consistent with the observed phenomenon that both NDI and NTI have longer emission wavelength than NI-II. The SOC constant between the singlet and triplet states can be applied to access the ability of naphthalimide derivatives to take place in ISC and emit phosphorescence. The SOC constant between S1 and Tn of naphthalimide derivatives is substantially improved compared with that of that without bromine atoms, which is attributed to the heavy atom effect. For example, the SOC constant of S1 to T5 increases significantly from 13.15 cm−1 of NDI to 274.61 cm−1 of NDI-Br, and the SOC constant of S1 to T4 of NTI-Br (11.30 cm−1) is much higher than that of NTI (4.33 cm−1) (Table S1, ESI†). These computational results theoretically demonstrate that naphthalimide derivatives with a large conjugated structure and heavy atoms have the ability to emit near-infrared phosphorescence.
We wonder whether DTA can be employed as the host molecules to realize near-infrared RTP. To answer this question, the steady and delayed PL spectra of DTA and naphthalimide derivatives@DTA doping materials were collected. The host–guest doping materials were prepared though solvent evaporation, and the detailed procedure is discussed in the ESI.† The chemical structure and high purity of commercially available DTA are confirmed using H-NMR, C-NMR, mass spectra, and single-crystal data (Fig. S19–S25 and Tables S2 and S3, ESI†). L- and D-DTA only have strong absorptions below 300 nm, which originate from the B-band of the phenyl ring (Fig. S26, ESI†). As shown in Fig. 3a, all doping materials display strong RTP, which demonstrates that the DTA can stabilize and protect the triplet excitons from non-radiative relaxation. The strongest phosphorescence peaks of NI-I, NI-II, NDI, NDI-Br, NTI, and NTI-Br@DTA are located at 499 to 540, 614, 623, 632, and 662 nm, respectively. More importantly, one of the emission peaks of NTI-Br@DTA is located at the near-infrared region of 720 nm, confirming that near-infrared RTP can be achieved through a doping strategy. Moreover, as shown in Table 1, the prepared doping material features decent quantum yields, and the quantum yields of NI-I, NI-II, NDI, NDI-Br, NTI, and NTI-Br@DTA's RTP are 7.58, 1.71, 1.27, 4.84, 0.61, and 1.39%, respectively. By virtue of the heavy atom effect, the naphthalimide derivative with bromine atoms is endowed with a higher quantum yield than that of the naphthalimide derivative with bromine atoms. The doping ratio plays a significant role in the RTP intensity. As shown in Fig. S28 (ESI†), as the guest content decreases, the RTP intensity of the doped material initially increases and then decreases. Each doping material has an optimal doping ratio, and subsequent research is based on this optimal doping ratio. When the guest molecule content is high, the undesired triplet–triplet annihilation may result in weak RTP. Meanwhile, when the guest molecule content is low, the reduced number of luminescence centers will also lead to low RTP intensity.
Guest@DTA | Fluorescence | Phosphorescence | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
λ em (nm) | τ (ns) | Φ (%) | g Fmax | λ em (nm) | τ (ms) | Φ (%) | g Pmax | |
The gFmax represents the fluorescence maximum asymmetry factor value. The gPmax represents the phosphorescence maximum asymmetry factor value. The excitation wavelength of NI-I and NI-II is 340 nm. The excitation wavelength of NDI and NDI-Br is 360 nm. The excitation wavelength of NTI and NTI-Br is 405 nm. The delayed time is 50 μs. | ||||||||
NI-I | 383 | 7.30 | 14.78 | 0.0114 | 499, 521 | 2140.98 | 7.58 | 0.0106 |
NI-II | 398 | 6.26 | 0.93 | 0.0114 | 540, 586 | 228.02 | 1.71 | 0.0084 |
NDI | 413 | 5.51 | 0.42 | — | 614, 675 | 1.93 | 1.27 | — |
NDI-Br | 453 | 9.05 | 0.59 | — | 623, 684 | 0.57 | 4.84 | 0.0166 |
NTI | 487 | 3.04 | 2.35 | — | 632, 690 | 2.44 | 0.61 | — |
NTI-Br | 481 | 2.48 | 0.61 | 0.0126 | 662, 720 | 1.02 | 1.39 | 0.0114 |
The mechanism of photophysical properties is further investigated. As shown in Table 1 and Fig. 1c and 3a, the emission peaks of doping materials are consistent with the cryogenic delayed emission of naphthalimide derivatives, and the cryogenic phosphorescence curves of guest molecules closely resemble the RTP curves of the doping materials. These phenomena demonstrate that the guest molecules can well-disperse within the host molecules, much like they do in solution, and the RTP originates from the guest instead of host molecules. Meanwhile, the negligible shift in the emission peak also indicates that the DTA host molecule has no significant effect on the energy levels of the naphthalimide derivative. Under the same radiation, L- and D-DTA are non-emissive in either steady or delayed PL spectra due to the small-conjugation. The fluorescence and phosphorescence spectra of naphthalimide derivative@L-DTA and naphthalimide derivative@D-DTA are consistent in terms of intensity, shape, and peak positions (Fig. S29 and S30, ESI†). As shown in Fig. 3b and c, the phosphorescence lifetimes of NI-I, NI-II, NDI, NDI-Br, NTI, and NTI-Br@DTA at room temperature are 2.14 s, 228.02, 1.93, 0.57, 2.44, and 1.02 ms, respectively. The phosphorescence lifetimes of doping materials exhibit a similar trend to that of guest molecules, and the lifetime decreases sharply with the conjugation enlarging and the introduction of bromine atoms. The lifetime of NI-I@DTA RTP is slightly shorter than that of NI-I. However, the lifetime of other doping material RTP decreases sharply compared with that of guest molecule cryogenic phosphorescence. Reasons behind this phenomenon could be the molecular size difference. NI-I has the smallest molecular size, which makes NI-I easily embed into the crystalline lattice of the host. The strong interaction between the host and guest stabilized triplet excitons.
Owing to the long excited-state lifetimes of doped materials, their RTP performance can be visualized through optical images. As shown in Fig. 3d, the NI-I@DTA exhibits a green afterglow of approximately 15 s, while NI-II@DTA shows a yellow afterglow of about 2 s, and NDI@DTA and NTI@DTA display a shorter red afterglow. The afterglow of NDI-Br@DTA and NTI-Br@DTA are not observable to the naked eye due to a significantly shortened lifetime caused by the heavy atom effect. This phenomenon also indicates that the RTP color can be well-modulated by changing the guest molecules.
To figure out whether the L- and D-DTA host molecules can induce chirality of RTP, the circular dichroism spectra of host molecules and doping materials were obtained. The circular dichroism spectra of L- and D-DTA in both solid and solution states show significant symmetric Cotton effects within their absorption ranges, indicating the enantiomeric structure of the host and good ground-state optical activity (Fig. S31, ESI†). Notably, as shown in Fig. 4a–d, NTI-Br@DTA is endowed with the desirable circularly polarized emission, and the glum of its fluorescence and phosphorescence emission peak is measured to be 1.26 × 10−2 at 511 nm and 1.14 × 10−2 at 667 nm. Owing to the excellent chirality of DTA, the doping materials are endowed with decent glum. Similar to NTI-Br@DTA, NI-I, NI-II, and NDI-Br@DTA also exhibit CPRTP (Fig. S32–S38, ESI†). However, the observation of NDI and NTI@DTA was unsuccessful due to the relatively low phosphorescence intensities. Therefore, all of these results demonstrate that L- and D-DTA act as the host molecules to induce the chirality of emission.
Footnote |
† Electronic supplementary information (ESI) available. CCDC 2353069 and 2353070. For ESI and crystallographic data in CIF or other electronic format see DOI: https://doi.org/10.1039/d4tc01828a |
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