Electron‐Withdrawing Substituents Allow Boosted NIR‐II Fluorescence in J‐Type Aggregates for Bioimaging and Information Encryption

Author:

Zhu Yu1,Wu Peng1,Liu Senyao1,Yang Jieyu1,Wu Fapu1,Cao Wenwen1,Yang Yuexia1,Zheng Bingbing1,Xiong Hu1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Research Center for Analytical Sciences Tianjin Key Laboratory of Biosensing and Molecular Recognition Frontiers Science Center for New Organic Matter College of Chemistry Nankai University 300071 Tianjin China

Abstract

AbstractDeveloping molecular fluorophores with enhanced fluorescence in aggregate state for the second near‐infrared (NIR‐II) imaging is highly desirable but remains a tremendous challenge due to the lack of reliable design guidelines. Herein, we report an aromatic substituent strategy to construct highly bright NIR‐II J‐aggregates. Introduction of electron‐withdrawing substituents at 3,5‐aryl and meso positions of classic boron dipyrromethene (BODIPY) skeleton can promote slip‐stacked J‐type arrangement and further boost NIR‐II fluorescence of J‐aggregates via increased electrostatic repulsion and intermolecular hydrogen bond interaction. Notably, NOBDP‐NO2 with three nitro groups (−NO2) shows intense NIR‐II fluorescence at 1065 nm and high absolute quantum yield of 3.21 % in solid state, which can be successfully applied in bioimaging, high‐level encoding encryption, and information storage. Moreover, guided by this electron‐withdrawing substituent strategy, other skeletons (thieno‐fused BODIPY, aza‐BODIPY, and heptamethine cyanine) modified with −NO2 are converted into J‐type aggregates with enhanced NIR‐II fluorescence, showing great potential to convert aggregation caused emission quenching (ACQ) dyes into brilliant J‐aggregates. This study provides a universal method for construction of strong NIR‐II emissive J‐aggregates by rationally manipulating molecular packing and establishing relationships among molecular structures, intermolecular interactions, and fluorescence properties.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

General Medicine

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