Aggregation‐Induced Emission in a Hyperbranched Poly(silylenevinylene) and Superamplification in Its Emission Quenching by Explosives — Ping Lü (2010) | RDL Network
Aggregation‐Induced Emission in a Hyperbranched Poly(silylenevinylene) and Superamplification in Its Emission Quenching by Explosives
Article 2010 en
Authors
PL
Ping Lü
JL
Jacky W. Y. Lam
JL
Jianzhao Liu
Abstract
1 min read
A silicon-containing hyperbranched polymer (hb-P1/2) with σ*-π* conjugation was prepared in a good yield and high molecular weight by rhodium-catalyzed alkyne polyhydrosilylation of 1,2-bis(4-ethynylphenyl)-1,2-diphenylethene (1) with tris(4-dimethylsilylphenyl)amine (2). The polymer was thermally stable, losing merely 5% of its weight when heated to ≈445 °C. Whereas hb-P1/2 was weakly luminescent when molecularly dissolved, it became highly emissive when supramolecularly aggregated, showing an aggregation-induced emission (AIE) phenomenon. A superamplification effect was observed when the AIE nanoaggregates were used as fluorescent chemosensor for explosive detection: the quenching efficiency was greatly increased in a nonlinear fashion with increasing quencher concentration.
Jianzhao Liu, Yongchun Zhong, Jacky W. Y. Lam, Ping Lü, Yuning Hong, Yong Yu, Yanan Yue, Faisal Mahtab, Herman H. Y. Sung, Ian D. Williams, Kam Sing Wong, Ben Zhong Tang
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