AI Article Synopsis

  • Organic scintillators are crucial for medical diagnostics and security screening, but face challenges like low X-ray absorption and poor radioluminescence intensity.
  • By incorporating halogen bonding into materials like 9,10-bis(4-pyridyl)anthracene (BPA) with heavy atoms (e.g., Cl, Br, I), researchers have significantly improved radioluminescence properties, achieving increases in intensity by over 2 to 6.3 times.
  • This new approach, which also benefits organic phosphors, offers promising advancements for developing high-performance scintillator materials, enhancing their potential use in radiology and security applications.

Article Abstract

Organic scintillators with efficient X-ray excited luminescence are essential for medical diagnostics and security screening. However, achieving excellent organic scintillation materials is challenging due to low X-ray absorption coefficients and inferior radioluminescence (RL) intensity. Herein, supramolecular interactions are incorporated, particularly halogen bonding, into organic scintillators to enhance their radioluminescence properties. By introducing heavy atoms (X = Cl, Br, I) into 9,10-bis(4-pyridyl)anthracene (BPA), the formation of halogen bonding (BPA-X) enhances their X-ray absorption coefficient and restricts the molecular vibration and rotation, which boosts their RL intensity. The RL intensity of BPA-Cl and BPA-Br fluorochromes increased by over 2 and 6.3 times compared to BPA, respectively. Especially, BPA-Br exhibits an ultrafast decay time of 8.25 ns and low detection limits of 25.95 ± 2.49 nGy s. The flexible film constructed with BPA-Br exhibited excellent X-ray imaging capabilities. Furthermore, this approach is also applicable to organic phosphors. The formation of halogen bonding in bromophenyl-methylpyridinium iodide (PYI) led to a fourfold increase in RL intensity compared to bromophenyl-methyl-pyridinium (PY). It suggests that halogen bonding serves as a promising and effective molecular design strategy for the development of high-performance organic scintillator materials, presenting new opportunities for their applications in radiology and security screening.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/smll.202307277DOI Listing

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