4.8 Article

Rational Design of All-Inorganic Assemblies with Bright Circularly Polarized Luminescence

Journal

ADVANCED MATERIALS
Volume 35, Issue 7, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY-V C H VERLAG GMBH
DOI: 10.1002/adma.202209539

Keywords

birefringence; circularly polarized luminescence; inorganic nanowires; Langmuir-Schaefer assembly; quantum nanorods; quarter-wave plate

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Researchers have overcome the trade-off between luminescence efficiency and luminescence dissymmetry factor in chiral luminescent materials by assembling quantum nanorods and ultrathin inorganic nanowires, achieving high quality and high efficiency circularly polarized luminescence.
Materials with exceptional circularly polarized luminescence (CPL) are important in multi-field applications such as 3D display, anti-counterfeiting, sensing, spin electronics, etc. Although CPL properties have been widely investigated ranging from the traditional chiral organic molecules to the emerging chiral inorganic nanomaterials and their assemblies, a trade-off between the luminescence efficiency (quantum yield, phi) and the luminescence dissymmetry factor (g(lum)) is always the bottleneck for all the chiral luminescent materials, which hinders their practical application. Herein, a new route to overcome the paradox through rationally assembling quantum nanorods and ultrathin inorganic nanowires into ordered multilayer structures is reported, achieving both high phi and g(lum). In these assembled structures, the aligned quantum nanorods emit linearly polarized light that is then transformed to CPL by the aligned ultrathin nanowire assemblies with precisely controlled phase retardation. This method is universal and readily extended to versatile 1D nanomaterials, paving the way for the practical applications of CPL active materials.

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