TY - JOUR
T1 - Structural Water Molecules Confined in Soft and Hard Nanocavities as Bright Color Emitters
AU - Zhou, Jiafeng
AU - Yang, Taiqun
AU - Peng, Bo
AU - Shan, Bingqian
AU - Ding, Meng
AU - Zhang, Kun
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Authors. Published by American Chemical Society.
PY - 2022/1/26
Y1 - 2022/1/26
N2 - Molecules confined in the nanocavity and nanointerface exhibit rich, unique physicochemical properties, e.g., the chromophore in the β-barrel can of green fluorescent protein (GFP) exhibits tunable bright colors. However, the physical origin of their photoluminescence (PL) emission remains elusive. To mimic the microenvironment of the GFP protein scaffold at the molecule level, two groups of nanocavities were created by molecule self-assembly using organic chromophores and by organic functionalization of mesoporous silica, respectively. We provide strong evidence that structural water molecules confined in these nanocavities are color emitters with a universal formula of {X+·(OH-·H2O)·(H2O)n−1}, in which X is hydrated protons (H3O+) or protonated amino (NH3+) groups as an anchoring point, and that the efficiency of PL is strongly dependent on the stability of the main emitter centers of the structural hydrated hydroxide complex (OH-·H2O), which is a key intermediate to mediate electron transfer dominated by proton transfer at confined nanospace. Further controlled experiments and combined characterizations by time-resolved steady-state and ultrafast transient optical spectroscopy unveil an unusual multichannel radiative and/or nonradiative mechanism dominated by quantum transient states with a distinctive character of topological excitation. The finding of this work underscores the pivotal role of structurally bound H2O in regulating the PL efficiency of aggregation-induced emission luminogens and GFP.
AB - Molecules confined in the nanocavity and nanointerface exhibit rich, unique physicochemical properties, e.g., the chromophore in the β-barrel can of green fluorescent protein (GFP) exhibits tunable bright colors. However, the physical origin of their photoluminescence (PL) emission remains elusive. To mimic the microenvironment of the GFP protein scaffold at the molecule level, two groups of nanocavities were created by molecule self-assembly using organic chromophores and by organic functionalization of mesoporous silica, respectively. We provide strong evidence that structural water molecules confined in these nanocavities are color emitters with a universal formula of {X+·(OH-·H2O)·(H2O)n−1}, in which X is hydrated protons (H3O+) or protonated amino (NH3+) groups as an anchoring point, and that the efficiency of PL is strongly dependent on the stability of the main emitter centers of the structural hydrated hydroxide complex (OH-·H2O), which is a key intermediate to mediate electron transfer dominated by proton transfer at confined nanospace. Further controlled experiments and combined characterizations by time-resolved steady-state and ultrafast transient optical spectroscopy unveil an unusual multichannel radiative and/or nonradiative mechanism dominated by quantum transient states with a distinctive character of topological excitation. The finding of this work underscores the pivotal role of structurally bound H2O in regulating the PL efficiency of aggregation-induced emission luminogens and GFP.
KW - aggregation-induced emission
KW - green fluorescent protein (GFP)
KW - hydrated hydroxide complex
KW - nanocavity
KW - quantum transient states
KW - structural water molecules (SWs)
KW - topological excitation
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85146092714
U2 - 10.1021/acsphyschemau.1c00020
DO - 10.1021/acsphyschemau.1c00020
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85146092714
SN - 2694-2445
VL - 2
SP - 47
EP - 58
JO - ACS Physical Chemistry Au
JF - ACS Physical Chemistry Au
IS - 1
ER -