4.6 Article

Achieving full-color emission of Cu nanocluster self-assembly nanosheets by the virtue of halogen effects

Journal

SOFT MATTER
Volume 17, Issue 17, Pages 4550-4558

Publisher

ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/d1sm00061f

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NSFC [21773088, 21902057]
  2. JLU Science and Technology Innovative Research Team [2017TD-06]
  3. Jilin Province Science and Technology Research [20190103024JH]
  4. Jilin Provincial Education Department Science and Technology Project [JJKH20200940KJ]
  5. MOST of China
  6. Opening Funds of State Key Laboratory of Applied Optics, Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics, Chinese Academy of Science

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The study explores the use of halogen effects to tune the emission color of copper nanocluster self-assembly nanosheets, achieving tunable emission peaks by altering the adsorbed halogens. This approach demonstrates the potential for enhancing photoluminescence quantum yield and obtaining full-color emission through the simple introduction and mixing of cuprous halides in the assembly process, leading to the fabrication of monochrome and white LEDs.
Fluorescent Cu nanoclusters (NCs) have shown potential in lighting and display, because Cu is cheap and easily available. Despite recent successes in improving the emission intensity of Cu NCs on the basis of aggregation-induced emission enhancement and self-assembly-induced emission enhancement, the difficulty in tuning the emission color sheds the doubt for achieving high-performance white light-emitting diodes (WLEDs). In this work, halogen effects are utilized to tune the emission color of Cu nanocluster self-assembly nanosheets (NSASs). By altering the adsorbed halogens from Cl, Br to I, the emission peak of Cu NSASs is tunable from 495 to 674 nm. In this context, halogen atoms are capable of improving the charge transfer and molecular spin coupling of Cu NCs, and thereby narrow the S0T1 gap and facilitate the intersystem crossing of excitons from a singlet to triplet state. As a result, emission spectra redshift and the population of the exiton recombination via the triplet state pathway is increased, which leads to the improvement of the photoluminescence quantum yield (PLQY). By simply introducing and/or mixing different types of cuprous halides, Cu nanocluster co-assembly nanosheets (NCASs) with full-color emission are obtained. The as-prepared Cu NSASs and NCASs are further employed to fabricate monochrome and white LEDs.

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