Inorganic red-NIR emissive materials are particularly relevant in many fields like optoelectronic, bioimaging or solar cells. Benefiting from their emission in devices implies their integration in easy-to-handle materials like liquid crystals, whose long-range ordering and self-healing abilities could be exploited and influence emission. Herein, we present red-NIR emissive hybrid materials obtained with phosphorescent octahedral molybdenum cluster anions electrostatically associated with amphiphilic guanidinium minidendrons. Polarized optical microscopy and X-ray analysis show that while the minidendron chloride salts self-organize into columnar phases, their association with the dianionic metal cluster leads to layered phases. Steady-state and time-resolved emission investigations demonstrate the influence of the minidendron alkyl chain length on the phosphorescence of the metal cluster core.
Keywords: X-ray diffraction; cluster compounds; ionic liquid crystals; luminescence; organic-inorganic hybrid composites.
© 2021 The Authors. Chemistry - A European Journal published by Wiley-VCH GmbH.