Ferroelastic Control of the Multicolor Emission from a Triply Doped Organic Crystal

Emission from crystalline organic solids is often quenched by nonemissive energy-transfer deexcitation processes. While dispersion of fluorophores in polymers or other hosts has been used to enhance the emission intensity, this strategy results in randomization of guest orientation and optical losse...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Commins, Patrick (author)
Other Authors: Al-Handawi, Marieh B. (author), Deger, Caner (author), Polavaram, Srujana (author), Yavuz, Ilhan (author), Rezgui, Rachid (author), Li, Liang (author), Houk, K. N. (author), Naumov, Panče (author)
Published: 2024
Online Access:https://depot.sorbonne.ae/handle/20.500.12458/1636
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Summary:Emission from crystalline organic solids is often quenched by nonemissive energy-transfer deexcitation processes. While dispersion of fluorophores in polymers or other hosts has been used to enhance the emission intensity, this strategy results in randomization of guest orientation and optical losses at grain boundaries. Here, we report the doping of inherently nonemissive single crystals of anilinium bromide with three fluorescent organic molecules. The doping process equips the crystal with emission characteristics that tune from blue to deep orange. The emission intensity can be reversibly modulated by ferroelastic twinning, which causes the material to function as a multiemissive force sensor. This approach opens up new pathways in the manipulation of emissive properties in organic crystals and may have substantial implications for optoelectronic devices and sensors.