Developing ionic copper-iodine clusters with multiple emitting is crucial for enriching lighting and display materials with various colors. However, the luminescent properties of traditional ionic copper-iodine clusters are often closely associated with low-energy cluster-centered triplet emission, which will redshift further as the Cu⋅⋅⋅Cu bond length decreases. This article utilizes a pressure-treated strategy to achieve an anomalous pressure-induced blue-shifted luminescence phenomenon in ionic CuI(4-dimethylamino-1-ethylpyridinium) crystals for the first time, which is based on dominant through-space charge-transfer (TSCT). Herein, we reveal that the more advantageous through-space interactions in the competition between cuprophilic interactions and through-space interactions can lead to a blue-shifted luminescence. High-pressure angle-dispersive X-ray diffraction and high-pressure infrared experiments show that the enhanced through-space interactions mainly originate from forming new intermolecular C-H⋅⋅⋅I hydrogen bonds and the enhancement of van der Waals interactions between organic cations and anionic clusters. Theoretical calculations and experimental studies of excited-state dynamics confirm that the blue-shifted emission is due to the increased energy gap between the excited triplet and ground states caused by the electron delocalization under stronger through-space interactions. This work deepens previous understanding and provides a new avenue to design and synthetic ionic copper-iodine clusters with high-energy TSCT emission.
Download full-text PDF |
Source |
---|---|
http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/anie.202414810 | DOI Listing |
Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!