4.8 Review

Organic Semiconducting Luminophores for Near-Infrared Afterglow, Chemiluminescence, and Bioluminescence Imaging

Journal

ADVANCED FUNCTIONAL MATERIALS
Volume 31, Issue 46, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adfm.202106154

Keywords

afterglow imaging; bioluminescence imaging; chemiluminescence imaging; optical imaging; organic semiconducting luminophores

Funding

  1. Singapore Ministry of Education, Academic Research Fund Tier 1 [2019-T1-002045, RG125/19]
  2. A*STAR SERC AME Programmatic Fund [SERC A18A8b0059]
  3. University Grants Committee/Research Grants Council of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region via the GRF project [11300320]
  4. Research startup fund of NJUPT [NY220068]
  5. Natural Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province [BK20200751]
  6. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62005127]
  7. Singapore Ministry of Education, Academic Research Fund Tier 2 [MOE2018-T2-2-042]

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The emergence of near-infrared self-luminescence imaging has addressed limitations in optical imaging caused by shallow penetration depth and tissue autofluorescence. Organic semiconducting luminophores are preferred for biological applications due to their biodegradable potential and outstanding optical properties. Challenges and solutions in the field of OSLs for self-luminescence imaging are discussed in this review.
Optical imaging has played a pivotal role in deciphering in vivo bioinformatics but is limited by shallow penetration depth and poor imaging performance owing to interfering tissue autofluorescence induced by concurrent photoexcitation. The emergence of near-infrared (NIR) self-luminescence imaging independent of real-time irradiation has timely addressed these problems. There are two main kinds of self-luminescent agents, namely inorganic and organic luminophores. Inorganic luminophores usually suffer from long-term biotoxicity concerns resulting from potential heavy-metal ions leakage and nonbiodegradability, which hinders their further translational application. In contrast, organic luminophores, especially organic semiconducting luminophores (OSLs) with good biodegradable potential, tunable design, and outstanding optical properties, are preferred in biological applications. This review summarizes the recent progress of OSLs used in NIR afterglow, chemiluminescence, and bioluminescence imaging. Molecular manipulation and nanoengineering approaches of OSLs are discussed, with emphasis on strategies that can extend the emission wavelength from visible to NIR range and amplify luminescence signals. This review concludes with a discussion of current challenges and possible solutions of OSLs in the self-luminescence field.

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