Abstract

Unraveling the total structure of the atom-precise silver cluster-assembled materials (CAMs) is extremely significant to elucidating the structure-property correlation, but it is a very challenging task. Herein, a new silver CAM is synthesized by a facile synthetic pathway with a unique distorted elongated square-bipyramid-based Ag11 core geometry. The core is protected by two different kinds of the surface protecting ligands (adamantanethiolate and trifluoroacetate) and connected through a bidentate organic linker. The crystallographic data show that this material embraces a one-dimensional periodic structure that orchestrates by various noncovalent interactions to build a thermally stable supramolecular assembly. Further characterization confirms its n-type semiconducting property with an optical band gap of 1.98 eV. The impact of an adamantanethiol-protected silver core on the optical properties of this type of periodic framework is analyzed by the UV-vis absorbance and emission phenomena. Theoretical calculations predicted that the occupied states are majorly contributed by Ag-S. Solvent-dependent photoluminescence studies proved that a polar solvent can significantly perturb the metal thiolate and thiolate-centered frontier molecular orbitals that are involved in the electronic transitions.

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