AI Article Synopsis

  • Stimuli-responsive optical materials are key for developing advanced optoelectronic devices, with organic-inorganic hybrid metal halides as a promising base due to their structural diversity.* -
  • A crown ether was used to modify a chiral antimony halide, enhancing its ability to produce self-trapped excitons, resulting in high photoluminescence (over 85%) and effective circularly polarized luminescence.* -
  • These antimony halide enantiomers exhibit sensitive luminescent responses to changes in excitation wavelength and temperature, enabling reversible color switching from blue to white to orange, with potential applications in innovative lighting and sensing technologies.*

Article Abstract

Stimuli-responsive optical materials have provided a powerful impetus for the development of intelligent optoelectronic devices. The family of organic-inorganic hybrid metal halides, distinguished by their structural diversity, presents a prospective platform for the advancement of stimuli-responsive optical materials. Here, we have employed a crown ether to anchor the A-site cation of a chiral antimony halide, enabling convenient control and modulation of its photophysical properties. The chirality-dependent asymmetric lattice distortion of inorganic skeletons assisted by a crown ether promotes the formation of self-trapped excitons (STEs), leading to a high photoluminescence quantum yield of over 85%, concomitant with the effective circularly polarized luminescence. The antimony halide enantiomers showcase highly sensitive stimuli-responsive luminescent behaviours towards excitation wavelength and temperature simultaneously, exhibiting a versatile reversible colour switching capability from blue to white and further to orange. temperature-dependent luminescence spectra, time-resolved luminescence spectra and theoretical calculations reveal that the multi-stimuli-responsive luminescent behaviours stem from distinct STEs within zero-dimensional lattices. By virtue of the inherent flexibility and adaptability, these chiral antimony chlorides have promising prospects for future applications in cutting-edge fields such as multifunctional illumination technologies and intelligent sensing devices.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10915841PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/d3sc06362cDOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

crown ether
12
chiral antimony
12
antimony halide
12
stimuli-responsive optical
8
optical materials
8
luminescent behaviours
8
luminescence spectra
8
multi-stimuli-responsive luminescence
4
luminescence enabled
4
enabled crown
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!