Publications by authors named "Guigui Ye"

Unlike traditional photoluminescence (PL), mechanoluminescence (ML) achieved under mechanical excitation demonstrates unique characteristics such as high penetrability, spatial resolution, and signal-to-background ratio (SBR) for bioimaging applications. However, bioimaging with organic mechanoluminescent materials remains challenging because of the shallow penetration depth of ML with short emission wavelengths and the absence of a suitable mechanical force to generate ML in vivo. To resolve these issues, the present paper reports the achievement of ultrasound (US)-excited fluorescence and phosphorescence from purely organic luminogens for the first time with emission wavelengths extending to the red/NIR region, with the penetrability of the US-excited emission being considerably higher than that of PL.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

The synthesis, crystal structure and room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) of a 2D metal-free inorganic covalent framework ((Hen) [BO(OH)], named as CityU-12, and en represents for ethylenediamine) are reported. The precise structure information of CityU-12 has been disclosed through both single-crystal X-ray diffraction (SCXRD) analysis and low-dose high-resolution transmission electron microscopy (LD-HRTEM) study. The SCXRD results show that CityU-12 composes of 2D anionic B─O-based covalent inorganic frameworks with protonated ethylenediamine locating in the pore sites of 2D B─O layers while LD-HRTEM suggests that CityU-12 has an interplanar distance of 0.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Organic near-infrared (NIR) room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) materials become a hot topic in bioimaging and biosensing for the large penetration depth and high signal-to-background ratio (SBR). However, it is challenging to achieve persistent NIR phosphorescence for severe nonradiative transitions by energy-gap law. Herein, a universal system with persistent NIR RTP is built by visible (host) and NIR phosphorescence (guest) materials, which can efficiently suppress the nonradiative transitions by rigid environment of crystalline host materials with good matching, and further promote phosphorescence emission by the additional phosphorescence resonance energy transfer (≈100%) between them.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF