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Abstract
Large Stokes shift fast emitters show a negligible reabsorption of their luminescence, a feature highly desirable for several applications such as fluorescence imaging, solar-light managing, and fabricating sensitive scintillating detectors for medical imaging and high-rate high-energy physics experiments. Here we obtain high efficiency luminescence with significant Stokes shift by exploiting fluorescent conjugated acene building blocks arranged in nanocrystals. Two ligands of equal molecular length and connectivity, yet complementary electronic properties, are co-assembled by zirconium oxy-hydroxy clusters, generating crystalline hetero-ligand metal-organic framework (MOF) nanocrystals. The diffusion of singlet excitons within the MOF and the matching of ligands absorption and emission properties enables an ultrafast activation of the low energy emission in the 100 ps time scale. The hybrid nanocrystals show a fluorescence quantum efficiency of ~60% and a Stokes shift as large as 750 meV (~6000 cm−1), which suppresses the emission reabsorption also in bulk devices. The fabricated prototypal nanocomposite fast scintillator shows benchmark performances which compete with those of some inorganic and organic commercial systems.
The development of highly luminescent materials such as large Stokes shift fast emitters is desirable for their potential application in photonics. Here the authors engineer hetero-ligand metal-organic frameworks nanoparticles to achieve high emission yield, large Stokes shift and realize a prototypal fast scintillator.
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Details
; Bezuidenhout, Charl X. 1
; Villa, I. 2
; Cova, F. 1
; Crapanzano, R. 1 ; Frank, I. 3 ; Pagano, F. 4
; Kratochwill, N. 5
; Auffray, E. 6
; Bracco, S. 1
; Vedda, A. 1 ; Dujardin, C. 7
; Sozzani, P. E. 1
; Meinardi, F. 1
; Comotti, A. 1
; Monguzzi, A. 1
1 Università degli Studi Milano-Bicocca, Dipartimento di Scienza dei Materiali, Milano, Italy (GRID:grid.7563.7) (ISNI:0000 0001 2174 1754)
2 Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic, FZU Institute of Physics, Prague, Czech Republic (GRID:grid.418095.1) (ISNI:0000 0001 1015 3316)
3 CERN, Geneva, Switzerland (GRID:grid.9132.9) (ISNI:0000 0001 2156 142X); Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich, Munich, Germany (GRID:grid.5252.0) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 973X)
4 CERN, Geneva, Switzerland (GRID:grid.9132.9) (ISNI:0000 0001 2156 142X); Università degli Studi Milano-Bicocca, Dipartimento di Fisica “Giuseppe Occhialini”, Milano, Italy (GRID:grid.7563.7) (ISNI:0000 0001 2174 1754)
5 CERN, Geneva, Switzerland (GRID:grid.9132.9) (ISNI:0000 0001 2156 142X); University of Vienna, Vienna, Austria (GRID:grid.10420.37) (ISNI:0000 0001 2286 1424)
6 CERN, Geneva, Switzerland (GRID:grid.9132.9) (ISNI:0000 0001 2156 142X)
7 Université de Lyon, Institut Lumière Matière, UMR5306 Université Lyon 1-CNRS, Villeurbanne cedex, France (GRID:grid.7849.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 2150 7757)




