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Assembly-Induced Bright-Light Emission from Solution-Processed Platinum(II) Inorganic Polymers

Authors :
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
European Research Council
Campus de Excelencia Internacional UAM+CSIC
Perevedentsev, Aleksandr
Bargardi, Fabio L.
Sanchez Ferrer, Antoni
Cheetham, Nathan J.
Sousaraei, Ahmad
Busato, Stephan
Gierschner, Johannes
Milian Medina, Begoña
Mezzenga, Raffaele
Wannemacher, Reinhold
Cabanillas–Gonzalez, Juan
Campoy Quiles, Mariano
Caseri, Walter R.
Ministerio de Economía y Competitividad (España)
European Research Council
Campus de Excelencia Internacional UAM+CSIC
Perevedentsev, Aleksandr
Bargardi, Fabio L.
Sanchez Ferrer, Antoni
Cheetham, Nathan J.
Sousaraei, Ahmad
Busato, Stephan
Gierschner, Johannes
Milian Medina, Begoña
Mezzenga, Raffaele
Wannemacher, Reinhold
Cabanillas–Gonzalez, Juan
Campoy Quiles, Mariano
Caseri, Walter R.
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

Synthesis, processing, and characterization are reported for a series of tetracyanoplatinate Magnus' salt (TCN-MS) derivatives-soluble derivatives of the generally intractable Magnus' green salt-that feature the general structure [Pt(NH2R)(4)] [Pt(CN)(4)] where R is a branched alkyl group or a w-phenylalkyl group. In solutions, these coordination compounds generally dissolve on the level of individual ion pairs as shown by X-ray diffraction analysis. To enable the formation of quasi-one-dimensional linear stacks of Pt(II) atoms in thin films, the matrix-assisted assembly is employed, whereby the compounds are codissolved with poly(ethylene oxide) (PEO), followed by film casting, thermally activated assembly, and eventual removal of PEO. Remarkably, assembled TCN-MS inorganic polymers exhibit bright blue-green photoluminescence. A detailed investigation of the assembly process and simultaneously modified solid-state optical properties is performed using a range of microscopy, optical and vibrational spectroscopy, and thermal analysis techniques. Given their unusual combination of optical properties, namely, transparency in the visible region, high photoluminescence quantum efficiencies (up to 13% in first-demonstration samples), and large Stokes shifts (up to 1 eV), TCN-MS derivatives are proposed as a promising class of light-emitting materials for emerging applications in molecular optoelectronics, the potential and challenges of which are discussed.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1257723455
Document Type :
Electronic Resource