Molecular and Aggregate Synergistic Engineering of Aggregation-Induced Emission Luminogens to Manipulate Optical/Electronic Properties for Efficient and Diversified Functions

ACS Nano. 2023 May 9;17(9):8782-8795. doi: 10.1021/acsnano.3c02134. Epub 2023 Apr 19.

Abstract

The optical/electronic properties of organic luminescent materials can be regulated by molecular structure modification, which not only requires sophisticated and time-consuming synthesis but also is unable to accurately afford the optical properties of materials in the aggregate state. Herein, a facile strategy of molecular and aggregate synergistic engineering is proposed to manipulate the optical/electronic properties of a luminogen, ACIK, in the solid state for efficient and diversified functions. ACIK is facilely synthesized and exhibits three polymorphic states (ACIK-Y, ACIK-R, and ACIK-N) with a large emission difference of 102 nm from yellow to near-infrared (NIR). Their structure-property relationships were investigated by crystallographic analyses and computational studies. ACIK-Y, with the most twisted structure, exhibits an intriguing color-tuned fluorescence between yellow and NIR in the solid state in response to multiple stimuli. Shuttle-like ACIK-R microcrystals exhibit an optical waveguide property with a low optical loss coefficient of 19 dB mm-1. ACIK dots display bright NIR-I emission, large Stokes shift, and strong NIR-II two-photon absorption. ACIK dots show specific lipid droplets-targeting capability and can be successfully applied for two-photon fluorescence imaging of mouse brain vasculature with deep penetration and high spatial resolution. This study will inspire more insights in developing advanced optical/electronic materials based on a single chromophore for practical applications.

Keywords: aggregation-induced emission; molecular and aggregate engineering; optical waveguide; polymorphism; two-photon fluorescence bioimaging.