Publications by authors named "Xing-Yu Xia"

Organic molecules have been regarded as ideal candidates for near-infrared (NIR) optoelectronic active materials due to their customizability and ease of large-scale production. However, constrained by the intricate molecular design and severe energy gap law, the realization of optoelectronic devices in the second near-infrared (NIR (II)) region with required narrow band gaps presents more challenges. Herein, we have originally proposed a cocrystal strategy that utilizes intermolecular charge-transfer interaction to drive the redshift of absorption and emission spectra of a series BFTQ ( = 0, 1, 2, 4) cocrystals, resulting in the spectra located at NIR (II) window and reducing the optical bandgap to ∼0.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The study introduces a new technique combining liquid and vapor-phase growth methods to create two-dimensional organic lateral heterostructures (2D OLHs) from perylene and its derivatives, achieving sizes of ~20 μm and thicknesses between 20 to 400 nm.
  • - The growth process involves a unique screw dislocation behavior that organizes atoms in a spiral pattern, reducing defects and maintaining structural integrity during crystal formation.
  • - The resulting 2D OLHs exhibit excellent light-transport properties and adjustable exciton conversion, making them promising for use in photonic applications, and the method may be applied to other aromatic hydrocarbon compounds.
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Organic charge transfer (CT) cocrystals open a new door for the exploitation of low-dimensional near-infrared (NIR) emitters by a convenient self-assembly approach. However, research about the fabrication of sheet-like NIR-emitting microstructures that are significant for structural construction and integrated application is limited by the unidirectional molecular packing mode. Herein, via regulation of the biaxial intermolecular CT interaction, single-crystalline microsheets with remarkable NIR emission from 720 to 960 nm were synthesized via the solution self-assembly process of dithieno[3,2-:2',3'-]thiophene and 7,7,8,8-tetracyanoquinodimethane.

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