4.8 Article

Through-Space Interaction of Tetraphenylethylene: What, Where, and How

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN CHEMICAL SOCIETY
Volume 144, Issue 17, Pages 7901-7910

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/jacs.2c02381

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation of China [21788102, 81501591]
  2. Research Grants of Council of Hong Kong [16305518, 16307020, 16306620, N-HKUST609/19, C6014-20W]
  3. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities [2021QNA4032]
  4. Open Fund of Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Luminescence from Molecular Aggregates
  5. South China University of Technology [2019B030301003]
  6. Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation(MCI) [PID2019-104654GB-I00]
  7. Innovation of Technology Commission [ITCCNERC14SC01]

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This study reveals a new strategy for the luminescence mechanism of tetraphenylethylene, providing a quantitative understanding of the through-space interaction and establishing a theoretical solid-state model, expanding the understanding of molecular behavior.
Electronic conjugation through covalent bonds is generally considered as the basis for the electronic transition oforganic luminescent materials. Tetraphenylethylene (TPE), anefficientfluorophore with aggregation-induced emission character,fluoresces blue emission in the aggregate state, and suchphotoluminescenceisalwaysascribedtothethrough-bondconjugation (TBC) among the four phenyl rings and the centralC???C bond. However, in this work, systematic spectroscopicstudies and DFT theoretical simulation reveal that the intra-molecular through-space interaction (TSI) between two vicinalphenyl rings generates the bright blue emission in TPE but not theTBC effect. Furthermore, the evaluation of excited-state decaydynamics suggests the significance of photoinduced isomerizationin the nonradiative decay of TPE in the solution state. More importantly, different from the traditional qualitative description forTSI, the quantitative elucidation of the TSI is realized through the atoms-in-molecules analysis; meanwhile, a theoretical solid-statemodel for TPE and other multirotor systems for studying the electronic configuration is preliminarily established. The mechanisticmodel of TSI delineated in this work provides a new strategy to design luminescent materials beyond the traditional theory of TBCand expands the quantum understanding of molecular behavior to the aggregate level.

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