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Supramolecular Approach for Fine-Tuning of the Bright Luminescence from Zero-Dimensional Antimony(III) Halides.


ABSTRACT: Halides of ns2 metal ions have recently regained broad research interest as bright narrowband and broadband emitters. Sb(III) is particularly appealing for its oxidative stability (compared to Ge2+ and Sn2+) and low toxicity (compared to Pb2+). Square pyramidal SbX5 anion had thus far been the most common structural motif for realizing high luminescence efficiency, typically when cocrystallized with an organic cation. Luminescent hybrid organic-inorganic halides with octahedral coordination of Sb(III) remain understudied, whereas fully inorganic compounds show very limited structural engineerability. We show that the host-guest complexation of alkali metal cations with crown ethers fosters the formation of zero-dimensional Sb(III) halides and allows for adjusting the coordination number (5 or 6). The obtained compounds exhibit bright photoluminescence with quantum yields of up to 89% originating from self-trapped excitons, with emission energies, Stokes shifts, and luminescence lifetimes finely-adjustable by structural engineering. A combination of environmental stability and strong, intrinsic temperature-dependence of the luminescence lifetimes in the nanosecond-to-microsecond range nominate these compounds as highly potent luminophores for remote thermometry and thermography owing to their sensitivity range of 200-450 K and high specific sensitivities of 0.04 °C-1.

SUBMITTER: Morad V 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7493224 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jul

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Supramolecular Approach for Fine-Tuning of the Bright Luminescence from Zero-Dimensional Antimony(III) Halides.

Morad Viktoriia V   Yakunin Sergii S   Kovalenko Maksym V MV  

ACS materials letters 20200617 7


Halides of ns<sup>2</sup> metal ions have recently regained broad research interest as bright narrowband and broadband emitters. Sb(III) is particularly appealing for its oxidative stability (compared to Ge<sup>2+</sup> and Sn<sup>2+</sup>) and low toxicity (compared to Pb<sup>2+</sup>). Square pyramidal SbX<sub>5</sub> anion had thus far been the most common structural motif for realizing high luminescence efficiency, typically when cocrystallized with an organic cation. Luminescent hybrid orga  ...[more]

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