4.8 Article

Transformation of Nonporous Adaptive Pillar[4]arene[1]quinone Crystals into Fluorescent Crystals via Multi-Step Solid-Vapor Postsynthetic Modification for Fluorescence Turn-on Sensing of Ethylenediamine

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 142, Issue 36, Pages 15560-15568

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.0c07482

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [21434005, 91527301]

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Organic solid-state fluorescent crystals have received extensive attention owing to their remarkable and promising optoelectronic applications in many fields. Current methods to obtain organic fluorescent crystals usually involve two steps: (1) solution phase organic synthesis and (2) crystallization of target fluorescent compounds. Direct transformation from nonfluorescent organic crystals to fluorescent organic crystals by postsynthetic modification (PSM) might be a potential alternative to the traditional methods. Although it is common to implement PSM for porous frameworks, it remains a huge challenge for nonporous organic crystals. Herein, we report a novel method of multistep solid-vapor PSM in nonporous adaptive crystals (NACs) of a pillar[4]arene[1]quinone (M1) to prepare organic solid-state fluorescent crystals. Fluorescent organic crystals can be simply generated when guest-free M1 crystals were exposed to ethylenediamine (EDA) vapor. However, only nonemissive crystals of a thermodynamically metastable intermediate M2 are obtained through solid-vapor single-crystal-to-single-crystal transformation of CH3CN-loaded M1 crystals. Solution-phase reaction of M1 with EDA affords three distinct compounds with different fluorescent properties, which are demonstrated to be the main components of the fluorescent organic crystals that are generated by the solid-vapor PSM. Mechanistic studies show that the pillararene skeleton not only induces the solid-vapor PSM by physical adsorption of EDA but also facilitates the fluorescent emission in the solid state by restricting intermolecular pi-pi interactions to avoid aggregation-caused quenching (ACQ). Furthermore, this interesting phenomenon is applied for facile fluorescence turn-on sensing of EDA vapor to distinguish EDA from other aliphatic amines.

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