Engineering π-π Interactions for enhanced photoluminescent properties: Unique discrete dimeric packing of perylene diimides

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Abstract

This article reports the enhanced photoluminescent properties observed in the crystals of a cube-plane-cube shape amphiphile composed of perylene diimide (PDI) tethered with polyhedral oligomeric silsesquioxanes (POSS) at the imide position via either rigid or flexible linkages (POSS-PDI-POSS). The fluorescence quantum yields (Φf) of the conjugates in crystal (∼0.48) are much higher than that of the more amorphous samples (∼0.17) and that of the reference compound without pendant POSS cage (∼0.12). The enhancement was understood in three ways. First, their self-assembly behaviors in gaseous phase were studied by tandem mass spectrometry coupled with traveling wave ion mobility separation; second, their self-assembly behaviors in solution were revealed by concentration- and solvent-dependent experiments using UV/vis absorption and fluorescence spectrometry; and third, the molecular packing in crystals was determined by wide angle X-ray diffraction and transmission electron microscope. The results demonstrate the conjugates' strong tendency toward dimer formation in solution and show a unique molecular packing of discrete dimeric motifs in the solid states. It suggests that the high Φf of these conjugates can be attributed to the discontinuous π-π stacking, which results in a weaker electron interaction between the dimers, and the relatively fixed position of the PDI, which prohibits the common structural relaxation of PDIs π-planes.

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Shao, Y., Yin, G. Z., Ren, X., Zhang, X., Wang, J., Guo, K., … Sun, B. (2017). Engineering π-π Interactions for enhanced photoluminescent properties: Unique discrete dimeric packing of perylene diimides. RSC Advances, 7(11), 6530–6537. https://doi.org/10.1039/c6ra28147h

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