Lighting the way to see inside two-photon absorption materials: Structure-property relationship and biological imaging

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Abstract

The application of two-photon absorption (2PA) materials is a classical research field and has recently attracted increasing interest. It has generated a demand for new dyes with high 2PA cross-sections. In this short review, we briefly cover the structure-2PA property relationships of organic fluorophores, organic-inorganic nanohybrids and metal complexes explored by our group. (1) The two-photon absorption cross-section (δ) of organic fluorophores increases with the extent of charge transfer, which is important to optimize the core, donor-acceptor pair, and conjugation-bridge to obtain a large δ value. Among the various cores, triphenylamine appears to be an efficient core. Lengthening of the conjugation with styryl groups in the D-π-D quadrupoles and D-π-A dipoles increased δ over a long wavelength range than when vinylene groups were used. Large values of δ were observed for extended conjugation length and moderate donor-acceptors in the near-IR wavelengths. The δ value of the three-arm octupole is larger than that of the individual arm, if the core has electron accepting groups that allow significant electronic coupling between the arms; (2) Optical functional organic/inorganic hybrid materials usually show high thermal stability and excellent optical activity; therefore the design of functional organic molecules to build functional organic-inorganic hybrids and optimize the 2PA properties are significant. Advances have been made in the design of organic-inorganic nanohybrid materials of different sizes and shapes for 2PA property, which provide useful examples to illustrate the new features of the 2PA response in comparison to the more thoroughly investigated donor-acceptor based organic compounds and inorganic components; (3) Metal complexes are of particular interest for the design of new materials with large 2PA ability. They offer a wide range of metals with different ligands, which can give rise to tunable electronic and 2PA properties. The metal ions, including transition metals and lanthanides, can serve as an important part of the structure to control the intramolecular charge-transfer process that drives the 2PA process. As templates, transition metal ions can assemble simple to more sophisticated ligands in a variety of multipolar arrangements resulting in interesting and tailorable electronic and optical properties, depending on the nature of the metal center and the energetics of the metal-ligand interactions, such as intraligand charge-transfer (ILCT) and metal-ligand charge-transfer (MLCT) processes. Lanthanide complexes are attractive for a number of reasons: (i) their visible emissions are quite long-lived; (ii) their absorption and emission can be tuned with the aid of appropriate photoactive ligands; (iii) the accessible energy-transfer path between the photo-active ligands and the lanthanide ion can facilitate efficient lanthanide-based 2PA properties. Thus, the above materials with excellent 2PA properties should be applied in two-photon applications, especially two-photon fluorescence microscopy (TPFM) and related emission-based applications. Furthermore, the progress of research into the use of those new 2PA materials with moderate 2PA cross section in the near-infrared region, good biocompatibility, and enhanced two-photon excited fluorescence for two-photon bio-imaging is summarized. In addition, several possible future directions in this field are also discussed (146 references).

Figures

  • Figure 1. Experimental setup for the Z-scan experiment.
  • Figure 2. Experimental setup for two-photon fluorescence intensity at different excitation wavelengths.
  • Figure 3. Molecular structures of 1–10.
  • Table 1. Photophysical data of 1–10.
  • Figure 4. The molecular structures of 11–21. l
  • Table 2. Photophysical data of 11–21.
  • Figure 5. (a) One and two-photon florescence image of HepG2 cells with 18 in the presence of Fe3+ (λex = 840 nm, emission wavelength from 575 to 675 nm); (b) One and two-photon florescence image of HepG2 cells with 18 in the presence of Fe3+ and EDTA (λex = 840 nm, emission wavelength from 575 to 675 nm); (c) One and two-photon florescence image of HepG2 cells with 19 in the presence of Cu2+ (λex = 820 nm, emission wavelength from 575 to 675 nm); (d) One and two-photon florescence image of HepG2 cells with 19 in the presence of Cu2+ and EDTA (λex = 820 nm, emission wavelength from 575 to 675 nm); (e–h) Normalized fluorescence intensity analysis corresponding to (a–d), cell number n = 30, one-way ANOVA was used for statistical analysis for independent experiments, p < 0.005.
  • Figure 6. The molecule structures of 22–49. Figure 6. The molecule structures of 22–49.

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Zhang, Q., Tian, X., Zhou, H., Wu, J., & Tian, Y. (2017). Lighting the way to see inside two-photon absorption materials: Structure-property relationship and biological imaging. Materials. MDPI AG. https://doi.org/10.3390/ma10030223

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