Abstract

Luminescence in the second near-infrared (NIR-II, 1,000-1,700 nm) window is beneficial especially for deep tissue imaging and optical sensors because of intrinsic high permeability through various media. Strong electron-acceptors with low-lying lowest unoccupied molecular orbital (LUMO) energy levels are a crucial unit for donor-acceptor (D-A) π-conjugated polymers (CPs) with the NIR-II emission property, however, limited kinds of molecular skeletons are still available. Herein, D-A CPs involving fluorinated boron-fused azobenzene complexes (BAz) with enhanced electron-accepting properties are reported. Combination of fluorination at the azobenzene ligand and trifluoromethylation at the boron can effectively lower the LUMO energy level down to -4.42 eV, which is much lower than those of conventional strong electron-acceptors. The synthesized series of CPs showed excellent absorption/fluorescence property in solution over a wide NIR range including NIR-II. Furthermore, owing to the inherent solid-state emissive property of the BAz skeleton, obvious NIR-II fluorescence from the film (up to λFL = 1213 nm) and the nanoparticle in water (λFL = 1036 nm, brightness = up to 29 cm-1 M-1) were observed, proposing that our materials are applicable for developing next-generation of NIR-II luminescent materials.

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