Handbook of Aggregation-Induced Emission, Volume 1. Группа авторов

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Handbook of Aggregation-Induced Emission, Volume 1 - Группа авторов


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      Wei‐Hong Zhu Shanghai Key Laboratory of Functional Materials Chemistry Key Laboratory for Advanced Materials and Institute of Fine Chemicals Joint International Research Laboratory of Precision Chemistry and Molecular Engineering Feringa Nobel Prize Scientist Joint Research Center School of Chemistry and Molecular Engineering East China University of Science & Technology, Shanghai, China

      Aggregation‐induced emission (AIE) describes a photophysical phenomenon in which molecular aggregate exhibits stronger emission than its single‐molecule counterpart. AIE research provides an excellent platform to explore aggregate behaviours since it emphasizes the new properties endowed by molecular aggregates beyond the microscopic molecular level. The 21‐year development of AIE research has witnessed the great achievements in this area, including mechanistic understanding, structure‐property relationship, and high‐tech applications. The achievements of AIE research demonstrate that many behaviours and functions that are absent in molecular species can be founded in molecular aggregates. Since the properties of molecular ensembles are closer to those of macroscopic materials, AIE research is of both scientific value and technological importance for real applications.

      Due to its great value and huge potential, AIE research is attracting more and more attention from chemistry, physics, materials science, medical and biomedical science and shows promising applications in these fields. Noteworthy, as a general platform to study aggregate science, AIE keeps integrating with other research fields involving materials, biology, medicine, energy and environment, and injects new vitality into these fields. When more researchers are working on this field, more breakthroughs in both fundamental research and application are envisioned in the future.

      This handbook is an essential reading for scientists and engineers who are designing optoelectronic materials and chemical/biomedical sensors. It is also a valuable reference book to academic researchers in materials science, physical and synthetic organic chemistry as well as physicists and biological chemists.

      Volume 1 surveys the breakthrough of aggregation‐induced emission (AIE) research area, focusing mainly on the fundamentals of various branched areas. In particularly, this volume presents the new properties that molecular ensembles bring to molecules and highlight the role of molecular aggregates in endowing or improving the performance of organic materials. The branches of AIE include crystallization‐induced emission (CIE), room temperature phosphorescence (RTP), aggregation‐induced delayed fluorescence (AIDF), anti‐Kasha transition (AKT), clusterization‐triggered emission (CTE), through space interaction (TSI), mechanoluminescence (ML), circularly polarized and others. We specifically focus on the new properties of materials endowed by molecular aggregates beyond the microscopic molecular level. We hope this volume will inspire more research into molecular ensembles at/beyond meso level and lead to the significant progresses in material science, biological science, etc.

      Youhong Tang

      Flinders University, Australia

      Ben Zhong Tang

      The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen, China

       Junkai Liu1 and Ben Zhong Tang1,2,3

       1 Department of Chemistry, Hong Kong Branch of Chinese National Engineering Research Center for Tissue Restoration and Reconstruction and Institute for Advanced Study, The Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, Clear Water Bay, Kowloon, Hong Kong, China

       2 Shenzhen Institute of Aggregate Science and Technology, School of Science and Engineering, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, Shenzhen, 2001 Longxiang Boulevard, Longgang District, Shenzhen City, Guangdong 518172, China

       3 State Key Laboratory of Luminescent Materials and Devices, Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Luminescence from Molecular Aggregates, Center for Aggregation-Induced Emission, South China University of Technology, Guangzhou, China

      Molecular motions drive most natural processes, ranging from the formation and annihilation of astronomical objects to the metabolism of microbes. All kinds of intra‐ or intermolecular interactions induce molecular motions in specific forms, through which the energy is generated and transformed. Mechanistic understanding and manipulation of molecular motions can lead to the effective design of smart molecular systems to achieve programmed tasks, as well as dynamic control of multiple processes. Indeed, by employing the light as a stimulus, researchers have developed a variety of functional molecular machines (e.g. molecular motors, molecular switches, molecular shuttles, and supramolecular assemblies) to achieve effective control of catalysis activity and chirality transfer in various practical applications, in which the dynamic manipulation of diverse molecular motions is critical [1].

      For organic luminescence processes, molecular motions also extensively affect the photophysical behaviors for organic luminophores and govern the excited‐state decay pathways, including vibrational relaxation, internal conversion, intersystem crossing, kinetic quenching, etc.[2]. Upon photoexcitation, the coupled nuclear and electronic motions will drive the excited molecules to evolve through radiative and nonradiative pathways [3]. However, traditional photophysical research usually focuses on the highly rigid and conjugated molecules and investigates the targets in the gas phase or solution, in which the importance of intramolecular motions to the luminescence is less considered, and the variation of molecular motions in the solid state is often ignored [4]. In 2001, the discovery and proposal of aggregation‐induced emission (AIE) triggered the research on molecular motions and photophysical studies in the aggregate or the solid state [5]. The luminogens with the AIE property (AIEgens) often show different scales of molecular motions in different phases. Vigorous intramolecular motions in the solution can nonradiatively dissipate excited‐state energy and always result in weak light emission, whereas such motions can be restricted in the solid state due to the environmental constraints so that the emission can be strongly enhanced [6].

      In this chapter, we will take a journey of mechanistic studies for AIE from the general RIM to mechanisms developed recently and propose the perspective on the further exploration in the future.

      When we look into the AIE phenomenon, two essential questions arise: why do the AIEgens show none or weak emission in the solution?


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