Metallophilicity-Induced Clusterization: Single-Component White-Light Clusteroluminescence with Stimuli Responses

10 December 2020, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

The single-component white-light-emitting materials play an essential role in the next-generation solid-state lighting technology. Herein, linear gold(I) complex TPPGPA with conglobate trimer configuration trigged by aurophilic interactions in crystalline state was prepared to emit dual phosphorescent white-light emission, which also exhibited multi-stimuli responsive luminescent properties including thermochromism and mechanochromism. Specifically, the molecular packing mode and aurophilic interactions regulation were subtly taken as a functional relationship of the experimental correlation with emission. The results showed that the regulated aurophilic interactions and restriction of molecular motion were determined to be the precipitating factor and as a function of the wavelength and intensity, which is significant for the design guide about intelligent stimuli-responsive white-light emissive luminescent materials. Furthermore, their application in temperature-responsive white-light illumination was successfully demonstrated.

Keywords

white light emission
gold(I) complex
aurophilic interaction
stimuli-responsive materials
metallophilicity-induced clusterization (MIC)

Supplementary materials

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TPPGPA-293K
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TPPGPA-100 K
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Supporting information
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