Gold compound shifts from a visible fluorescence to emitting infrared when ground

Gold compound shifts from a visible fluorescence to emitting infrared when ground
9-anthryl gold(I) isocyanide (3α) turns invisible and emits infrared after it’s ground whereas phenyl gold(I) isocyanide (1) turns yellow. Credit: Seki T. et al., Journal of the American Chemical Society, May 2, 2017

Some materials luminesce, changing their color and intensity when under mechanical forces such as grinding or rubbing. These luminescent "mechanochromic" materials can produce various emission colors in the visible light spectrum, from blue to red. Their color-shifts under force are well documented, and are caused by changes to the molecules' crystal structures.

Recently, a big shift from the visible spectrum to the infrared has been identified and described in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. Such a large change is unprecedented and is exciting because of its potential applications for bioimaging and invisible inks.

In an attempt to develop new mechanochromic compounds, a research group at Hokkaido University in Japan found a gold compound called 9-anthryl gold(Ι) isocyanide complex has a unique feature. In its original form, the substance produced a visible blue fluorescence with a wavelength of 448 nanometres (nm). After being ground up into a fine powder, the substance produced infrared emissions (phospholescence) with a wavelength of 900 nm. The are invisible to the .

"This is the first time a material has been reported to make such a dramatic shift - a change of 452 nm - that also reaches into the infrared part of the light spectrum," says Tomohiro Seki, the lead and corresponding author of the paper.

The research group's X-ray crystallographic analyses revealed that the large shift is based on a crystalline-to-amorphous phase transition which should create strong intermolecular interactions between the gold ions.

"The development of infrared emissive is generally difficult, and appropriate design strategies remain limited. However, in this case, simple grinding can afford an infrared emissive material," says Hajime Ito, the corresponding author. "Infrared is invisible to the naked eye but detectable using a spectrometer. So, our material has a great potential for bioimaging and security inks."

More information: Tomohiro Seki et al. Luminescent Mechanochromic 9-Anthryl Gold(I) Isocyanide Complex with an Emission Maximum at 900 nm after Mechanical Stimulation, Journal of the American Chemical Society (2017). DOI: 10.1021/jacs.7b00587

Citation: Gold compound shifts from a visible fluorescence to emitting infrared when ground (2017, May 31) retrieved 20 April 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2017-05-gold-compound-shifts-visible-fluorescence.html
This document is subject to copyright. Apart from any fair dealing for the purpose of private study or research, no part may be reproduced without the written permission. The content is provided for information purposes only.

Explore further

Changing colours of light

4 shares

Feedback to editors