Abstract

The development of organic materials with white-light emission and thermally activated delayed fluorescence (TADF) properties in the solid state remain a challenge. Herein, a series of white-light-emitting organic luminogens have been developed and are found to show aggregation-induced delayed fluorescence (AIDF) characteristics. The AIDF emitters present dual-emission consisted of prompt fluorescence and TADF in the crystalline state. Their white-light emissions can be easily tuned by altering the chemical structure and connecting position of the heterocyclic aromatic substituent. Under the stimuli of mechanical force and solvent vapor, the compounds exhibit remarkable and reversible mechanochromism, in which their emission colors are switchable between white and yellow. Upon grinding, they also display linearly tunable luminescence colors, as well as force-induced TADF enhancement, which may be associated with the more compact molecular packing and the restriction of intramolecular motions. The results from time-resolved emission scanning and theoretical calculation suggest that the dual-emission of the AIDF luminogens likely results from the twisted intramolecular charge transfer transitions of the molecules, and the reversible mechanochromism properties probably stem from the interconversion of the quasi-axial and the quasi-equatorial conformations.

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