Journal
DALTON TRANSACTIONS
Volume 46, Issue 35, Pages 11656-11663Publisher
ROYAL SOC CHEMISTRY
DOI: 10.1039/c7dt02697h
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Funding
- National Natural Science Foundation of China [21671175, 21371153]
- Program for Science & Technology Innovation Talents in Universities of Henan Province [164100510005]
- Zhengzhou University
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Metal-organic frameworks (MOFs) with light-harvesting building blocks provide an excellent platform to study energy transfer in networks with well-defined structures. Here, we report the synthesis, dissolution-recrystallization structural transformation (DRST) and the Forster resonance energy transfer (FRET) properties of a 2D microporous MOF {[Cd-2(L-1)(3)(Hdabco)(2)]center dot 5DMAc center dot 6H(2)O}(n) (Cd-MOF, 1). Complex 1 can be dissolved in water and three other products with different dimensions recrystallized from the aqueous solution under diverse reaction conditions were obtained. Due to the porosity and excellent blue luminescence properties of complex 1, we also studied the FRET process between 1 and guest dyes. Two distinct organic dye molecules viz., acridine orange (AO) and rhodamine B (RhB), are encapsulated in 1 which has honeycomb-type nanochannels, and their influence on fluorescence emission has also been studied. The microporous complex 1 in (AO + RhB)@1 serves as an energy funnel that harvests high energy excitation and channels it onto AO and then onto RhB. The steady-state fluorescence and fluorescence dynamics of emission reveal successfully the process of stepwise vectorial energy transfer. Therefore, MOFs could be a class of promising host materials to be further explored in the field of energy transfer between MOF-host and organic guests.
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