Chiral Recognition with Room-Temperature Phosphorescence in Guest-Host Energy-Transfer Systems

22 February 2022, Version 1
This content is a preprint and has not undergone peer review at the time of posting.

Abstract

Chiral recognition with molecular luminescence is a beneficial but challenging method due to an often lack of dramatic difference in intermolecular interactions between the chiral analyte/substrate pair versus their enantiomeric counterpart. Here we show that the difference in room-temperature phosphorescence (RTP) can be substantially augmented by employing guest-host energy-transfer systems. By covalent attachment of chiral amino compounds to a phthalimide host and a naphthalimide guest, respectively, RTP intensity difference of two orders of magnitude with a detection limit of >98% enantiomeric excess (ee) could be achieved. For example, S-enantiomeric guests in S-enantiomeric hosts produce strong red RTP afterglow while no appreciable RTP could be observed in an S/R guest-host combination. The huge spectroscopic difference in RTP results in conspicuous steady-state and delayed-emission variations, which could easily be discriminated by the naked eye. A generalized concept in solid-state RTP chiral recognition is proposed to expand the application scope of the reported method.

Keywords

binary doping system
chiral recognition
host and guest
organic chiral solid
room temperature phosphorescence

Supplementary materials

Title
Description
Actions
Title
SI_Organic Chiral Solids RTP
Description
detail synthetic procedure and some photophysical data
Actions

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