Anionic polymerization of nonaromatic maleimide to achieve full-color nonconventional luminescence

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Abstract

Nonconventional or nonconjugated luminophore without polycyclic aromatics or extended π-conjugation is a rising star in the area of luminescent materials. However, continuously tuning the emission color within a broad visible region via rational molecular design remains quite challenging because the mechanism of nonconventional luminescence is not fully understood. Herein, we present a new class of nonconventional luminophores, poly(maleimide)s (PMs), with full-color emission that can be finely regulated by anionic polymerization even at ambient temperature. Interestingly, the general characteristics of nonconventional luminescence, cluster-triggered emission, e.g., concentration-enhanced emission, are not observed in PMs. Instead, PMs have features similar to aggregation-caused quenching due to boosted intra/inter-molecular charge transfer. Such a biocompatible luminescent material synthesized from a low-cost monomer shows great prospects in large-scale production and applications, including security printing, fingerprint identification, metal ion recognition, etc. It also provides a new platform of rational molecular design to achieve full-color nonconventional luminescence without any aromatics.

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Ji, X., Tian, W., Jin, K., Diao, H., Huang, X., Song, G., & Zhang, J. (2022). Anionic polymerization of nonaromatic maleimide to achieve full-color nonconventional luminescence. Nature Communications, 13(1). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-31547-2

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