Litcius/Paper detail

Vapoluminescence Behavior Triggered by Crystal-State Complexation between Host Crystals and Guest Vapors Exhibiting No Visible Fluorescence

Tomoki Ogoshi, Yukie Hamada, Ryuta Sueto, Ryosuke Kojima, Fumiyasu Sakakibara, Yuuya Nagata, Yoko Sakata, Shigehisa Akine, Toshikazu Ono, Takahiro Kakuta, Tada-aki Yamagishi

2020Crystal Growth & Design30 citationsDOI

Abstract

A rational design to create vapoluminescence materials is to install fluorescent tags into molecules. Changing the distance and arrangement of the fluorescent tags can be performed to trigger the vapoluminescence behavior. Herein, we unexpectedly observed a vapoluminescence behavior triggered by a crystal-state host–guest complexation between pillar[6]arene host crystals and organic guest vapors that both exhibit no fluorescence in the visible-light region. After the uptake of the guest vapors, the host–guest complex crystals exhibit blue fluorescence in the visible-light region. Charge-transfer interactions between the host and guest molecules in the crystal state mainly contribute to the observation of fluorescence in the visible-light region.

Topics & Concepts

FluorescenceMoleculeCrystal (programming language)PhotochemistryVisible spectrumChemistryPillarHost (biology)CrystallographyMaterials scienceOptoelectronicsOpticsOrganic chemistryBiologyProgramming languageEcologyComputer scienceEngineeringPhysicsStructural engineeringSupramolecular Chemistry and ComplexesLuminescence and Fluorescent MaterialsMolecular Sensors and Ion Detection