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Multiple‐State Emissions from Neat, Single‐Component Molecular Solids: Suppression of Kasha's Rule

Ya‐Hang Wu, Hongyan Xiao, Bin Chen, Richard G. Weiss, Yuzhe Chen, Chen‐Ho Tung, Li‐Zhu Wu

2020Angewandte Chemie International Edition90 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract Three rigid and structurally simple heterocyclic stilbene derivatives, ( E )‐3 H ,3′ H ‐[1,1′‐biisobenzofuranylidene]‐3,3′‐dione, ( E )‐3‐(3‐oxobenzo[c] thiophen‐1(3 H )‐ylidene)isobenzofuran‐1(3 H )‐one, and ( E )‐3 H ,3′ H ‐[1,1′‐bibenzo[c] thiophenylidene]‐3,3′‐dione, are found to fluoresce in their neat solid phases, from upper (S 2 ) and lowest (S 1 ) singlet excited states, even at room temperature in air. Photophysical studies, single‐crystal structures, and theoretical calculations indicate that large energy gaps between S 2 and S 1 states (T 2 and T 1 states) as well as an abundance of intra and intermolecular hydrogen bonds suppress internal conversions of the upper excited states in the solids and make possible the fluorescence from S 2 excited states (phosphorescence from T 2 excited states). These results, including unprecedented fluorescence quantum yields (2.3–9.6 %) from the S 2 states in the neat solids, establish a unique molecular skeleton for achieving multi‐colored emissions from upper excited states by “suppressing” Kasha's rule.

Topics & Concepts

Component (thermodynamics)State (computer science)Environmental scienceChemistryPhysicsThermodynamicsComputer scienceAlgorithmLuminescence and Fluorescent MaterialsOrganic Light-Emitting Diodes ResearchSynthesis and Properties of Aromatic Compounds
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