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MARCO CANNAS

Host–Guest Engineering of MOF-808 for Random Lasing and Solid-State Emission

  • Authors: Ficarra, G.; Pramanik, A.; Barbata, L.G.; Cannas, M.; Ettlinger, R.L.; Morris, R.E.; Buscarino, G.; Messina, F.; Sciortino, A.
  • Publication year: 2025
  • Type: Articolo in rivista
  • OA Link: http://hdl.handle.net/10447/689552

Abstract

Fluorescent organic dyes have a broad range of applications across various fields. However, their use is threatened by stability issues such as photobleaching and aggregation-caused quenching that prevent them from showing solid-state luminescence and being used in high-power photonics applications for a long period. One possibility to overcome these problems is to embed dye molecules within a hosting platform. Metal–organic frameworks (MOFs) are among the best candidates to overcome these problems due to their porous nature, which provides excellent sorption capacities while ensuring stability for potential guest molecules, even in extreme environments. In this work, we investigate the optical performance of rhodamine B and coumarin 343 when interacting with Zr-based MOF-808. On one hand, we demonstrate that inclusion of dye molecules in MOF-808 cavities prevents aggregation-induced quenching, enabling the use of dyes in powdered form and enhancing their emission in solid-state applications, such as fingerprint detection. On the other hand, the dye–MOF interaction in solution reveals that MOF-808 nanoparticles act as efficient scatterers, significantly enhancing random lasing emission by narrowing the emission spectra and reducing the lasing threshold. The lasing performance is shown to be dependent on the MOF concentration and excitation intensity, with an optimal concentration minimizing the threshold and bandwidth. Finally, we demonstrate the feasibility of combining MOF-808 nanoparticles and dyes into polymeric thin films, where the MOFs contribute to halving the lasing threshold, making the system suitable for portable lasing application