Long-Lived Highly Emissive MOFs as Potential Candidates for Multiphotonic Applications
Mario Guti\'errez, Cristina Mart\'in, Johan Hofkens, Jin-Chong Tan

TL;DR
This study demonstrates how different crystalline structures of MOFs can exhibit long-lived RTP and TADF emissions, highlighting their potential in photonic applications like sensors, security, lighting, and MOF-LEDs.
Contribution
It reveals the relationship between linker arrangement in MOFs and their emission properties, advancing the design of MOFs for optical applications.
Findings
Denser MOF shows long-lived green RTP due to hyperfine coupling.
Porous MOF exhibits temperature-dependent turquoise TADF emission.
First example of a MOF-LED based on RTP-MOFs.
Abstract
Long-lived emissive materials based on room temperature phosphorescence (RTP) and thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) are considered as the cornerstone of the development of optical sensors, security systems and solid-state lighting. Nevertheless, molecular systems with these properties are scarce because most of them suffer from aggregation caused quenching emission (ACQ). One approach to address this shortcoming is by inhibiting the molecular motions/vibrations by employing a fixed matrix as afforded by a metal-organic framework (MOF). There, the organic chromophores are confined in a crystalline framework, and the structure-property relationship can be designed to get RTP/TADF. Inspired by this, the present work explores the relation between the linker arrangement and the physicochemical properties of two isochemical MOFs with different crystalline structures. The denser…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
