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Femtosecond (fs) laser pulses drive matter into a highly nonequilibrium state, allowing precise sculpturing of irradiated surface sites with sophisticated nanomorphologies. Here, we used fs-laser patterning to create diverse plasmonic morphologies on the top Au layer of the metal-insulator-metal sandwich. Mutual action of laser-driven thermomechanical effects and ultrafast solid-to-liquid transition allows control of the morphology resulting in pronounced surface reflectivity modulation, i.e., in a structural color effect. This enables template-free high-resolution color printing at a superior lateral resolution up to 50000 dots per inch and facile tunability of the color tone and saturation. Moreover, precise control over the orientation of the printed nanostructures within subwavelength lattices allows modulation of their local plasmonic response encrypting the optical information within the colorful images. The hidden information can be unveiled using a facile cross-polarized optical visualization scheme, rendering the proposed method with extra modalities combining high resolution information encryption, coloring, and security labeling.
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Plasmonic superstructures hold great potential in encrypted information chips but are still unsatisfactory in terms of resolution and maneuverability because of the limited fabrication strategies. Here, we develop an antielectric potential method in which the interfacial energy from the modification of 5-amino-2-mercapto benzimidazole (AMBI) ligand is used to overcome the electric resistance between the Au nanospheres (NSs) and substrate, thereby realizing the in situ growth of a Au-Ag heterodimers array in large scale. The morphology, number, and size of Ag domains on Au units can be controlled well by modulating the reaction kinetics and thermodynamics. Experiments and theoretical simulations reveal that patterned 3D Au-2D Ag and 3D Au-3D Ag dimer arrays with line widths of 400 nm exhibit cerulean and cyan colors, respectively, and achieve fine color modulation and ultrahigh information resolution. This work not only develops a facile strategy for fabricating patterned plasmonic superstructures but also pushes the plasmon-based high-resolution encrypted information chip into more complex applications.
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Conventional cryptographic methods rely on increased computational complexity to counteract the threat posed by growing computing power for sustainable protection. DNA cryptography circumvents this threat by leveraging complex DNA recognition to maintain information security. Specifically, DNA origami has been repurposed for cryptography, using programmable folding of the long scaffold strand carrying additional tagged strands for information encryption. Herein, a subtraction-based cryptographic strategy is presented that uses structural defects on DNA origami to contain encrypted information. Designated staple strands are removed from the staple pool with "hook" strands to create active defect sites on DNA origami for information encryption. These defects can be filled by incubating the structures with the intact pool of biotinylated staple strands, resulting in biotin patterns that can be used for protein-binding steganography. The yields of individual protein pixels reached over 91%, and self-correction codes are implemented to aid the information recovery. Furthermore, the encrypted organization of defective DNA origami structures is investigated to explore the potential of this method for scalable information storage. This method uses DNA origami to encrypt information in hidden structural features, utilizing subtraction for robust cryptography while ensuring the safety and recovery of data.
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Counterfeit products and data vulnerability present significant challenges in contemporary society. Hence, various methods and technologies are explored for anticounterfeiting encoding, with luminescent tracers, particularly luminescent carbon dots (CDs), emerging as a notable solution. CDs offer promising contributions to product security, environmental sustainability, and the circular economy. This critical review aims to highlight the luminescence responsiveness of CDs to physical and chemical stimuli, achieved through nanoengineering their chemical structure. The discussion will delve into the various tunable luminescence mechanisms and decay times of CDs, investigating preferential excitations such as up-conversion, delayed fluorescence, fluorescence, room temperature phosphorescence, persistent luminescence, energy and charge transfer, as well as photo-chemical interactions. These insights are crucial for advancing anticounterfeiting solutions. Following this exploration, a systematic review will focus on the research of luminescent CDs' smart encoding applications, encompassing anticounterfeiting, product tracing, quality certification, and information encryption. Finally, the review will address key challenges in implementing CDs-based technology, providing specific insights into strategies aimed at maximizing their stability and efficacy in anticounterfeiting encoding applications.
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Hydrogels have emerged as promising candidates for anticounterfeiting materials, owing to their unique stimulus-responsive capabilities. To improve the security of encrypted information, efforts are devoted to constructing transient anticounterfeiting hydrogels with a dynamic information display. However, current studies to design such hydrogel materials inevitably include sophisticated chemistry, complex preparation processes, and particular experimental setups. Herein, a facile strategy is proposed to realize the transient anticounterfeiting by constructing bivalent metal (M2+)-coordination complexes in poly(acrylic acid) gels, where the cloud temperature (Tc) of the gels can be feasibly tuned by M2+ concentration. Therefore, the multi-Tc parts in the gel can be locally programmed by leveraging the spatially selective diffusion of M2+ with different concentrations. With the increase of temperature or the addition of a complexing agent, the transparency of the multi-Tc parts in the gel spontaneously evolves in natural light, enabling the transient information anticounterfeiting process. This work has provided a new strategy and mechanism to fabricate advanced anticounterfeiting hydrogel materials.
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It is attractive but challenging to develop carbon dot (CD) based materials with tunable thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF), especially in the long wavelength region. Here, by simply calcinating the mixture of m-phenylenediamine and MgF2 at 300-500 °C, a series of CDs@MgF2 composites exhibiting yellow, white, and ultraviolet-blue TADF with high photoluminescence quantum yields of up to 37.6% are prepared. Photophysical studies reveal that the yellow TADF with long lifetimes of 810-1106 ms originates from the surface emission centers of CDs, while the ultraviolet-blue TADF with short lifetimes of 266-379 ms is related to the carbon core emission centers. The combination of yellow and ultraviolet-blue TADF in a single material triggers dynamic afterglow with time-dependent colors from white to yellow. The MgF2 matrix offers multiple confinement of CDs through a rigid network, strong space constraint, and robust covalent/hydrogen bonding, thus preventing the triplet excitations from non-radiative transitions. The electron-withdrawing fluorine atoms induce substantial spin-orbit coupling and reduce the singlet-triplet energy gap, consequently facilitating the reverse intersystem crossing to enhance TADF efficiency. Importantly, the CDs@MgF2 composites possess outstanding optical stability against water, organic solvents, strong acids, bases, and oxidants. The fascinating TADF features enable the successful demonstration of multilevel information encryption using CDs@MgF2.
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The design of smart stimuli-responsive photoluminescent materials capable of multi-level encryption and complex information storage is highly sought after in the current information era. Here, a novel adamantyl-capped CsPbBr3 (AD-CsPbBr3) perovskite NCs, along with its supramolecular host-guest assembly partner a modified ß-CD (mCD), mCD@AD-CsPbBr3, are designed and prepared. By dispersing these two materials in different solvents, namely, AD-CsPbBr3 in toluene, mCD@AD-CsPbBr3 in toluene, and mCD@AD-CsPbBr3 in methanol, the three solutions exhibit diverse photoluminescence (PL) turn-on/off or PL discoloration response upon supramolecular stimulus. Based on these responses, a proof-of-principle programmable Multi-Level Photoluminescence Encoding System (MPLES) is established. Three types of four-level and three types of three-level information encoding are achieved by the system. A layer-by-layer four-level information encryption and decryption as well as a two-level encrypted 3D code are successfully achieved.
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Phosphorescent materials with time-dependent phosphorescence colors (TDPCs) have great potential in advanced optical applications. Synthesis of such materials is attractive but challenging. Here, a series of carbon dot-porous Al2 O3 composites exhibiting distinctive TDPC characteristics is prepared by high-temperature pyrolysis of Al-based metal-organic frameworks NH2 -MIL-101(Al). The composite synthesized at 700 °C (CDs@Al2 O3 -700) shows an obvious change in phosphorescence color from blue to green after removing the excitation light of 280 nm. Photophysical analysis reveals that two emission centers in CDs, namely carbon core and surface states, are responsible for the short-lived blue phosphorescence (96 ms) and long-lived green phosphorescence (911 ms), respectively. The combination of blue and green phosphorescence with different decay rates triggering the interesting TDPC phenomenon. CDs@Al2 O3 -700 has a significantly high phosphorescence quantum yield of up to 41.7% and possesses an excellent optical stability against water, organic solvents, and strong oxidants, which benefits from the multi-confinement of CDs by the porous Al2 O3 matrix through rigid network, strong space constraint, and stable covalent bonding. Based on the TDPC property, multilevel coding patterns composed of CDs@Al2 O3 are successfully fabricated for advanced dynamic information encryption.
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Circularly polarized room-temperature phosphorescence (CPRTP) simultaneously featuring multiple colors and extremely high dissymmetry factor (glum) is crucial for increasing the complexity of optical characteristics and advancing further development, but such a type of CPRTP is still unprecedented. The present work develops an effective and universal strategy to achieve full-color CPRTP with ultra-high glum factors in a polymeric cholesteric superhelix network, which is constructed by cholesteric liquid crystal polymer and chiral helical polymer (CHP). Taking advantage of the high helical twisting power of CHP, the resulting polymeric cholesteric superhelix network exhibits remarkable optical activity. Significantly, by adopting a simple double-layered architectures consisting of the cholesteric superhelix film and phosphorescent films, blue-, green-, yellow-, and red-CPRTP emissions are successfully obtained, with maximum |glum| values up to 1.43, 1.39, 1.09 and 0.84, respectively. Further, a multilevel information encryption application is demonstrated based on the multidimensional optical characteristics of the full-color double-layered CPRTP architectures. This study offers new insights into fabricating polymeric cholesteric superhelix with considerable CPRTP performance in advanced photonic applications.
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In this concept, we showcase the upsurge in the studies of dynamic ultralong room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) materials containing inorganic and/or organic components as versatile photo-responsive platforms. The goal is to provide a comprehensive analysis of photo-controllable RTP, and meanwhile delve into the underlying RTP properties of various classes of photochromic materials including metal-organic complexes, organic-inorganic co-crystals, purely organic small molecules and organic polymers. In particular, the design principles governing the integration of the photochromic and RTP moieties within a single material system, and the tuning of dynamic RTP in response to light are emphasized. As such, this concept sheds light on the challenges and opportunities of using these tunable RTP materials for potential applications in optoelectronics, particularly highlighting their use of reversible information encryption, erasable light printing and rewritable smart paper.
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Force-related discoloration materials are highly valuable because of their characteristics of visualization, easy operation, and environment friendliness. Most force-related discoloration materials focus on polymers and depend on bond scission, which leads to insensitivity and unrecoverable. Small-molecule systems based on well-defined molecular structures and simple composition with high sensitivity would exhibit considerable mechanochromic potential. However, to date, researches about force-related discoloration materials based on small molecule solution remain limited and are rarely reported. In this study, we developed a repeatable and instantaneous discoloration small molecule solution system by simple one-pot synthesis method. It exhibited an instantaneous chromic change from yellowish to dark green under shaking and reverting back to yellow within 1â minute after removal of the shaking. Experimental results confirmed that the discoloration mechanism is attributed to the oscillation accelerating the production of unstable ortho-OH phenoxyl radical. The newly developed shaking-induced discoloration small molecule system (SDSMS) promises in field of mechanical force sensing and optical encryption.
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Afterglow materials possess the remarkable capability to harness the energy and subsequently emit light after irradiation is turned off. Owing to their extraordinary ultralong lifetime, afterglow materials have garnered significant interest across various domains such as sensing, optoelectronics, bioimaging, and information encryption. However, these materials typically exhibit temperature sensitivity, rendering their afterglow emission susceptible to efficient quenching at room temperature. Consequently, this study presents herein a straightforward, simple, and universal approach for synthesizing metal-free carbon dots (CDs) endowed with thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) characteristics at room temperature. In this study, TADF-CDs were simply synthesized by pyrolyzing boronic acid (BA) and urea at 500 â for 3 h. Benefiting from the multi-confined effects facilitated by the robust structure of BA matrix, in conjunction with the co-doped heteroatoms of nitrogen and boron, the resultant TADF-CDs manifest remarkably prolonged afterglow TADF emission, characterized by a calculated lifetime of 184.64 ms; moreover, the blue afterglow emission remains perceptible to the naked eye for more than 6 s. The attributes of TADF-CDs were comprehensively elucidated through rigorous characterization, and the universality of the approach was corroborated through experimentation involving fourteen control CDs. Leveraging their distinctive TADF attributes, the prepared TADF-CDs were subsequently employed in advanced applications such as anti-counterfeiting and information encryption.
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The excitation-dependent emission properties of carbon dots (Cdots) are extensively reported, but their red emission is often weak, limiting their wider application. Here we introduce ethidium bromide, as a functional precursor with red emission, to enhance the red emission for Cdots, with comparable intensity at a broad wavelength range to multi-emission Cdots (M-Cdots). We found that Cdots prepared with ethidium bromide/ethylenediamine exhibited strong blue and red emission at 440 and 615 nm, with optimal excitation at 360 and 470 nm as M-Cdots, respectively, but the Cdots from single ethidium bromide (EB-Cdots) possessed weak red emission. M-Cdots exhibited a broad absorption band at 478 nm, but a band blue-shifted to 425 nm was observed for EB-Cdots, while no absorption was observed at 478-425 nm for the Cdots prepared with citric acid and ethylenediamine. Thus, we proposed that C=O and C=N formed a π-conjugation structure as the absorption band at 478 nm for the red emission of M-Cdots, as also confirmed with the excitation at 470 nm. Moreover, the π-conjugation structure is fragile and sensitive to harsh conditions, so red emission was difficult to observe for the Cdots prepared with citric acid/ethylenediamine or single ethidium bromide. M-Cdots possess two centers for blue and red emission with different structures. The dual emission was therefore used for ratiometric sensing with dichromate (Cr2O72-) and formaldehyde (HCHO) as the targets using the intensity ratio of the emissions at 615 and 440 nm. Due to the comparable intensity at a broad wavelength range, we designed encryption codes with five excitations at 360, 400, 420, 450, and 470 nm as the inputs, and the emission colors were used for information decoding. Thus, we determined why red emission was difficult to realize for Cdots, and our results could motivate the design of red-emission Cdots for extensive applications.
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Novel boron-doped carbon dots (BCDs) with extended afterglow characteristics were synthesized via a one-step solvothermal method using acrylamide, sulfosalicylic acid, and sodium tetraborate as protective matrices. The presence of boron from sodium tetraborate introduced an empty orbital, allowing it to form a more extended conjugated system with adjacent oxygen atoms, thereby lowering the energy level of the lowest unoccupied molecular orbital in the system. The phosphorescence emission of these BCDs exhibits a red shift over time from 450 to 500 nm. These BCDs have been effectively utilized to produce anti-counterfeit phosphorescent powder. Additionally, the BCDs display optimal fluorescence excitation at 330 nm and optimal emission at 420 nm. They demonstrate a detection limit for ciprofloxacin hydrochloride of 37 nM in the 1-100 µM concentration range and 26 nM in the 100-210 µM range. This fluorescence detection is governed by an inner filter effect. Real sample testing further confirms that these BCDs serve as excellent sensors for ciprofloxacin hydrochloride.
Asunto(s)
Boro , Carbono , Ciprofloxacina , Límite de Detección , Puntos Cuánticos , Ciprofloxacina/análisis , Ciprofloxacina/orina , Ciprofloxacina/química , Carbono/química , Puntos Cuánticos/química , Boro/química , Mediciones Luminiscentes/métodos , Temperatura , Antibacterianos/análisis , Antibacterianos/química , Espectrometría de Fluorescencia/métodos , Colorantes Fluorescentes/químicaRESUMEN
Information encryption strategies have become increasingly essential. Most of the fluorescent security patterns have been made with a lateral configuration of red, green, and blue subpixels, limiting the pixel density and security level. Here we report vertically stacked, luminescent heterojunction micropixels that construct high-resolution, multiplexed anticounterfeiting labels. This is enabled by meniscus-guided three-dimensional (3D) microprinting of red, green, and blue (RGB) dye-doped materials. High-precision vertical stacking of subpixel segments achieves full-color pixels without sacrificing lateral resolution, achieving a small pixel size of â¼µm and a high density of over 13,000 pixels per inch. Furthermore, a full-scale color synthesis for individual pixels is developed by modulating the lengths of the RGB subpixels. Taking advantage of these unique 3D structural designs, trichannel multiplexed anticounterfeiting Quick Response codes are successfully demonstrated. We expect that this work will advance data encryption technology while also providing a versatile manufacturing platform for diverse 3D display devices.
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Smart control of ionic interactions is a key factor to manipulate the luminescence dynamics of lanthanides and tune their emission colors. However, it remains challenging to gain a deep insight into the physics involving the interactions between heavily doped lanthanide ions and in particular between the lanthanide sublattices for luminescent materials. Here we report a conceptual model to selectively manipulate the spatial interactions between erbium and ytterbium sublattices by designing a multilayer core-shell nanostructure. The interfacial cross-relaxation is found to be a leading process to quench the green emission of Er3+, and red-to-green color-switchable upconversion is realized by fine manipulation of the interfacial energy transfer on the nanoscale. Moreover, the temporal control of up-transition dynamics can also lead to an observation of green emission due to its fast rise time. Our results demonstrate a new strategy to achieve orthogonal upconversion, showing great promise in frontier photonic applications.
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The ability to generate and manipulate photoluminescence (PL) behavior has been of primary importance for applications in information security. Excavating novel optical effects to create more possibilities for information encoding has become a continuous challenge. Herein, we present an unprecedented PL temporary quenching that highly couples with thermodynamic phase transition in a hybrid crystal (DMML)2 MnBr4 (DMML=N,N-dimethylmorpholinium). Such unusual PL behavior originates from the anomalous variation of [MnBr4 ]2- tetrahedrons that leads to non-radiation recombination near the phase transition temperature of 340â K. Remarkably, the suitable detectable temperature, narrow response window, high sensitivity, and good cyclability of this PL temporary quenching will endow encryption applications with high concealment, operational flexibility, durability, and commercial popularization. Profited from these attributes, a fire-new optical encryption model is devised to demonstrate high confidential information security. This unprecedented optical effect would provide new insights and paradigms for the development of luminescent materials to enlighten future information encryption.
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Time-resolved photofluorochromism constitutes a powerful approach to enhance information encryption security but remains challenging. Herein, we report a strategy of using hydrogen bonds to regulate the time for initiating photofluorochromism. In our strategy, copolymers containing negative photochromic spiropyran (NSP), naphthalimide, and multiple hydrogen-bonding (UPy) units are designed, which display photo-switchable fluorescence resonance energy transfer (FRET) process from naphthalimide donor to the NSP acceptor. Interestingly, the FRET is locked via the dynamic hydrogen-bonding interaction between ring-opened NSP and UPy moieties, resulting in time-dependent fluorescence. The change in fluorescence can be finely regulated via UPy fraction in the polymers. Besides the novel time-dependent fluorescence, the polymers also take advantage of visible-light triggerable, excellent photostability, photoreversibility, and processability. We demonstrate that these properties enable them many application opportunities such as fluorescent security labels and multilevel information encryption patterns.
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Thermochromic fluorescent materials (TFMs) have attracted significant attention due to their unique fluorescent colorimetric response to temperature. However, existing TFMs still suffer from weak stimulus responsiveness, broad temperature response ranges, uncontrollable emission color changes, and low quantum yields. In this study, we address these issues by designing and synthesizing three diketone-boron complexes with distinct emission wavelengths (NWPU-(2-4)). Utilizing a molecular engineering strategy to manipulate intramolecular charge transfer transitions and molecular packing modes, our synthesized complexes exhibit efficient fluorescence emission in both solution and solid states. Moreover, their emission wavelengths are highly sensitive to environmental polarity. By incorporating these compounds into thermosensitive matrices of long-chain alkanes, we produced TFMs with varied fluorescence emission peak variation ranges. Notably, the TFM based on NWPU-4, owing to its strong charge transfer transitions and dense J-aggregate packing configuration, not only exhibits intense fluorescence emission spanning the deep red to near-infrared spectrum but also displays a remarkable 90â nm broad range of thermochromic properties. Ultimately, it was successfully applied to programmable, thermally controlled, multi-level information encryption.
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Circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) is promising for applications in many fields. However, most systems involving CPL are within the visible range; near-infrared (NIR) CPL-active materials, especially those that exhibit high glum values and can be controlled spatially and temporally, are rare. Herein, dynamic NIR-CPL with a glum value of 2.5×10-2 was achieved through supramolecular coassembly and energy-transfer strategies. The chiral assemblies formed by the coassembly between adenosine triphosphate (ATP) and a pyrene derivative exhibited a red CPL signal (glum of 10-3). The further introduction of sulfo-cyanine5 resulted in a energy-transfer process, which not only led to the NIR CPL but also increased the glum value to 10-2. Temporal control of these chiral assemblies was realized by introducing alkaline phosphatase to fabricate a biomimetic enzyme-catalyzed network, allowing the dynamic NIR CPL signal to be turned on. Based on these enzyme-regulated temporally controllable dynamic CPL-active chiral assemblies, a multilevel information encryption system was further developed. This study provides a pioneering example for the construction of dynamic NIR CPL materials with the ability to perform temporal control via the supramolecular assembly strategy, which is expected to aid in the design of supramolecular complex systems that more closely resemble natural biological systems.