Abstract

In this paper, we report the use of electrospinning methods for the preparation of polymeric nanofibers containing Lanthanide–Organic Frameworks (LnMOFs) and present a detailed investigation of their spectroscopic properties. The nanocomposites were based in polyvinyl alcohol (PVA) and two isotypical 2D LnMOFs ([Ln(DPA)(HDPA)], where H2DPA is pyridine 2,6-dicarboxylic acid and Ln = Tb3+ and Eu3+ ions, which we have designated as EuMOF@PVA and TbMOF@PVA, respectively. Additionally, we prepared three tunable visible light-emitting devices based on nanofibers containing different [Tb(DPA)(HDPA)]/[Eu(DPA)(HDPA)] relative concentrations (95–5 wt%, 80–20 wt% and 50–50 wt%, designated as Tb0.95Eu0.05MOF@PVA, Tb0.8Eu0.2MOF@PVA, and Tb0.5Eu0.5MOF@PVA, respectively), and investigated the energy transfer among the optical centers. The emission spectrum of EuMOF@PVA presents typical narrow bands of the Eu3+ 5D0 → 7FJ transitions centered in a non-centrosymmetric site, and its profile indicates that in EuMOF@PVA the point group of the Eu3+ ion is distorted from the local C1 symmetry observed in as-prepared material. Horrocks' rule applied to EuMOF@PVA leads to nw = 0.40, in an indication that the encapsulation of LnMOF materials in PVA does not necessarily imply the coordination of water molecules in the inner-sphere of the lanthanide ion; thus, the distortion of the symmetry around of metal center can be solely associated to the steric effect of the PVA chains. The 5D4 → 7F5 transition centered at ca. 543 nm is the strongest in the emission spectrum of TbMOF@PVA, corresponding to ca. 52% of the integrated emission spectrum. The emission spectra of Tb0.95Eu0.05MOF@PVA, Tb0.8Eu0.2MOF@PVA, and Tb0.5Eu0.5MOF@PVA show lines typical of the Eu3+ and Tb3+ ions. The colors emitted by Tb0.95Eu0.05MOF@PVA, Tb0.8Eu0.2MOF@PVA and Tb0.5Eu0.5MOF@PVA are in the green-yellow (0.4083, 0.4803), yellow (0.4364, 0.4616) and orange (0.5042, 0.4212) portions of the chromaticity chart, respectively. The Tb3+ → Eu3+ 〈WET〉 and 〈nET〉 do not vary with the increasing of the acceptor (Eu3+) concentration, since the donor–acceptor interaction strength is a function of distance.

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