Affiliation:
1. Institute of Molecular Sciences and Engineering Institute of Frontier and Interdisciplinary Science Shandong University Qingdao 266237 P. R. China
2. Materials Simulation and Modelling Department of Applied Physics, and Center for Computational Energy Research Department of Applied Physics Eindhoven University of Technology 5600 MB Eindhoven The Netherlands
3. Current address: Univ. Rennes, ENSCR, CNRS, ISCR-UMR 6226 35000 Rennes France
4. Life and Health Intelligent Research Institute Tianjin University of Technology Tianjin 300384 P. R. China
Abstract
AbstractThe achievement of significant photoluminescence (PL) in lanthanide ions (Ln3+) has primarily relied on host sensitization, where energy is transferred from the excited host material to the Ln3+ ions. However, this luminous mechanism involves only one optical antenna, namely the host material, which limits the accessibility of excitation wavelength‐dependent (Ex‐De) PL. Consequently, the wider application of Ln3+ ions in light‐emitting devices is hindered. In this study, we present an organic–inorganic compound, (DMA)4LnCl7 (DMA+=[CH3NH2CH3]+, Ln3+=Ce3+, Tb3+), which serves as an independent host lattice material for efficient Ex‐De emission by doping it with trivalent antimony (Sb3+). The pristine (DMA)4LnCl7 compounds exhibit high luminescence, maintaining the characteristic sharp emission bands of Ln3+ and demonstrating a high PL quantum yield of 90–100 %. Upon Sb3+ doping, the compound exhibits noticeable Ex‐De emission with switchable colors. Through a detailed spectral study, we observe that the prominent energy transfer process observed in traditional host‐sensitized systems is absent in these materials. Instead, they exhibit two independent emission centers from Ln3+ and Sb3+, each displaying distinct features in luminous color and radiative lifetime. These findings open up new possibilities for designing Ex‐De emitters based on Ln3+ ions.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Natural Science Foundation of Shandong Province