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1.
Chemphyschem ; 17(19): 3096-3101, 2016 Oct 05.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27337999

RESUMEN

The Kamlet-Taft solvent parameters of solvate ionic liquids (SILs) prepared from lithium salts with glyme and glycol ligands are determined. The dipolarity/polarisibilities (π*) are high, similar to those found in conventional ionic liquids. The H-bond basicities (ß) depend strongly on the anion. The H-bond acidities (α) are high in both glyme and glycol SILs, indicating that the lithium is acting as a H-bond donor site. "Poor" SILs have glyme-rich and salt-rich regions. In these liquids the π* and ß values are almost identical to the parent glyme or glycol, and the α values are determined by the salt alone.

2.
Chem Mater ; 36(17): 8247-8254, 2024 Sep 10.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39279904

RESUMEN

Luminescent metal-organic frameworks exhibit great potential as materials for nanophotonic applications because of their programmable properties and tunable structures. In particular, luminescent guests (LG) can be hosted by metal-organic frameworks due to their porosity and guest confinement capacity, forming LG@MOF composite systems. However, such guest-host systems are mainly produced as loose powders, preventing their widespread use in practical devices and technological applications that require implementation of a stable continuum solid. In this regard, using monolithic MOF hosts might be a workable option to solve this challenge. Herein, we reported the facile synthesis and fabrication of novel prototypical sol-gel monolithic systems, designated as LG@monoMOF. Red (rhodamine B), blue (7-methoxycoumarin), and yellow (fluorescein) emitting dyes were encapsulated in a robust UiO-66 monolithic host, resulting in the red, blue, and yellow light-emitting luminescent monoliths. The mechanical and photophysical characterization of the three LG@monoMOF systems was systematically carried out in order to unravel the role of guest-host interactions in the mechanical and optical response of the bespoke LG@monoMOF composites.

3.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39365709

RESUMEN

Fabrication of metal-organic framework (MOF) thin films is an ongoing challenge to achieve effective device integration. Inkjet printing has been employed to print various luminescent metal-organic framework (MOF) films. Luminescent metal-organic nanosheets (LMONs), nanometer-thin particles of MOF materials with comparatively large micrometer lateral dimensions, provide an ideal morphology that offers enhancements over analogous MOFs in luminescent properties such as intensity and photoluminescent quantum yield. The morphology is also better suited to the formation of thin films. This work harnesses the preferential features of LMONs to access the advanced technique of aerosol-jet printing (AJP) to print luminescent films with precise geometries and patterns across the micrometer and centimeter length scales. AJP of LMONs exhibiting red (R), green (G), and blue (B) emission were studied systematically to reveal the increase of luminescence upon additive layering printing until a threshold was reached limited by self-quenching. By combining different LMON emitters, emission chromaticity and intensity were shown to be tunable, including the combination of RGB emitters to fabricate white-light-emitting films. A white-light LMON film was printed onto a UV light emitting diode (LED), producing a working white-light-emitting diode. Printing with multiple distinct photoluminescent inks produced intricate multicolor patterns that dynamically responded to excitation wavelength, acting either as micrometer-scale LED-type cells or larger visual tags. Collectively, the work offers an advancement for MOF thin films by printing MON materials using AJP, offering a precise method for manufacturing a wide range of critical functional devices, from luminescent sensors to optoelectronics, and more broadly even the opportunity for printed circuitry with conductive MONs.

4.
Nat Commun ; 11(1): 2808, 2020 06 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32499512

RESUMEN

Reversible structural transformations of porous coordination frameworks in response to external stimuli such as light, electrical potential, guest inclusion or pressure, amongst others, have been the subject of intense interest for applications in sensing, switching and molecular separations. Here we report a coordination framework based on an electroactive tetrathiafulvalene exhibiting a reversible single crystal-to-single crystal double [2 + 2] photocyclisation, leading to profound differences in the electrochemical, optical and mechanical properties of the material upon light irradiation. Electrochemical and in situ spectroelectrochemical measurements, in combination with in situ light-irradiated Raman spectroscopy and atomic force microscopy, revealed the variable mechanical properties of the framework that were supported using Density Functional Theory calculations. The reversible structural transformation points towards a plethora of potential applications for coordination frameworks in photo-mechanical and photoelectrochemical devices, such as light-driven actuators and photo-valves for targeted drug delivery.

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