TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular design to enhance binaphthyl-based chiroptics using organoboron chemistry in isomeric chiral scaffolds
AU - Zhang, Kai
AU - Zhao, Jingyi
AU - Zhang, Niu
AU - Chen, Jin Fa
AU - Wang, Nan
AU - Yin, Xiaodong
AU - Zheng, Xiaoyan
AU - Chen, Pangkuan
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Royal Society of Chemistry.
PY - 2022/2/7
Y1 - 2022/2/7
N2 - Access to high-performance circularly polarized luminescence is highly desired in materials science but it hitherto remains a considerable challenge. We herein present a conceptually universal design strategy to improve the chiral luminescent properties of a series of binaphthyl-based compounds (MeBTT, MeBTB, p-BTT, p-BTB, m-BTT and m-BTB). The binaphthyl skeleton in all cases was π-functionalized either by an electron donor (Ar3N) or acceptor (Ar3B), and correlations of the molecular structures to their photophysical characters were systematically investigated. They all exhibited strong photoluminescence both in solution with quantum efficiency (ΦPL,DCM) up to 100% and as solids (ΦPL,solid = 21-59%). The optical resolution into enantiomers via chiral HPLC was achieved for p-BTT, p-BTB, m-BTT and m-BTB with helically ring-structured binaphthyls. We further unveiled that the sterically more constrained m-BTT and m-BTB exhibit superior chiroptical properties in circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) relative to the isomers p-BTT and p-BTB, evident from the order of magnitude of luminescence dissymmetry factor (|glum|) increasing from 10-4 to 10-3 in solution. Moreover, the double functionalization of the binaphthyl moiety with an electron donor-acceptor charge-transfer system resulted also in an experimentally improved CPL activity, as rationalized by TD-DFT calculations of a key angle (θμ,m) between vectors of the electric and magnetic transition dipole moments in the excited states. The three organoboranes (MeBTB, p-BTB and m-BTB) displayed dual emissions in polar solvents and the low-energy charge transfer bands were demonstrated to be air-sensitive and thermally responsive at elevated temperature.
AB - Access to high-performance circularly polarized luminescence is highly desired in materials science but it hitherto remains a considerable challenge. We herein present a conceptually universal design strategy to improve the chiral luminescent properties of a series of binaphthyl-based compounds (MeBTT, MeBTB, p-BTT, p-BTB, m-BTT and m-BTB). The binaphthyl skeleton in all cases was π-functionalized either by an electron donor (Ar3N) or acceptor (Ar3B), and correlations of the molecular structures to their photophysical characters were systematically investigated. They all exhibited strong photoluminescence both in solution with quantum efficiency (ΦPL,DCM) up to 100% and as solids (ΦPL,solid = 21-59%). The optical resolution into enantiomers via chiral HPLC was achieved for p-BTT, p-BTB, m-BTT and m-BTB with helically ring-structured binaphthyls. We further unveiled that the sterically more constrained m-BTT and m-BTB exhibit superior chiroptical properties in circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) relative to the isomers p-BTT and p-BTB, evident from the order of magnitude of luminescence dissymmetry factor (|glum|) increasing from 10-4 to 10-3 in solution. Moreover, the double functionalization of the binaphthyl moiety with an electron donor-acceptor charge-transfer system resulted also in an experimentally improved CPL activity, as rationalized by TD-DFT calculations of a key angle (θμ,m) between vectors of the electric and magnetic transition dipole moments in the excited states. The three organoboranes (MeBTB, p-BTB and m-BTB) displayed dual emissions in polar solvents and the low-energy charge transfer bands were demonstrated to be air-sensitive and thermally responsive at elevated temperature.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85124571448&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1039/d1tc05329a
DO - 10.1039/d1tc05329a
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85124571448
SN - 2050-7526
VL - 10
SP - 1816
EP - 1824
JO - Journal of Materials Chemistry C
JF - Journal of Materials Chemistry C
IS - 5
ER -