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Renaissance of Organic Triboluminescent Materials
Author(s) -
Mukherjee Sanjoy,
Thilagar Pakkirisamy
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
angewandte chemie
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1521-3757
pISSN - 0044-8249
DOI - 10.1002/ange.201811542
Subject(s) - mechanoluminescence , luminescence , nanotechnology , materials science , molecule , solid state , the renaissance , organic molecules , persistent luminescence , chemistry , optoelectronics , organic chemistry , thermoluminescence , art history , art
Solid‐state luminescence of organic dyes is an elusive frontier, and understanding and designing solid‐state stimuli‐responsive materials is not trivial. “Mechanoluminescence” (ML) or “triboluminescence” (TL), which is associated with fracture or force‐initiated luminescence from a material, is currently attracting new interest. Fracturing the surfaces of organic crystals ordered in noncentrosymmetric space groups can electronically excite the surface and neighboring molecules through piezo‐ or pyroelectric effects, and this can result in luminescence when the molecules relax back to their ground states. The combined duration of these two consecutive phenomena leads to force‐generated luminescence or TL. Although TL has been known for a very long time, examples of TL‐active materials are scarce, but are increasing as synthetic and characterization procedures develop. The question is now whether the relatively rare phenomenon of TL needs to be reevaluated to obtain a broader understanding of the subject.