Single-component white-light-emitting materials based on lanthanide coordination assemblies
Abstract
White light-emitting materials (WLEMs) offer significant advantages over traditional incandescent light bulbs and compact fluorescent lamps due to their ability to provide pure white-light emission, low energy consumption, and suitability for large-area thin-film fabrication. White light can be obtained using several types of materials involving lanthanide ions and their combinations, but single component emitters based on lanthanide coordination assemblies remain rare and desirable for thinner devices that are, therefore, easier to control and that require fewer manufacturing steps. Over the past decade, single-component lanthanide coordination assemblies have garnered considerable attention as white-light-emitting photoluminescent materials, leading to notable advancements. The current review provides an overview of recent progress in this field, emphasizing WLEMs and photoluminescent colour-tuning properties realized in single-component lanthanide coordination assemblies (Sm3+, Eu3+ or Dy3+), which covers the origin, generation, and manipulation of different types of photoluminescence derived from ligand-centered fluorescence in the blue range and metal centered emissions in the visible region.
- This article is part of the themed collection: 2025 Frontier and Perspective articles